Palenquero | |
---|---|
Native to | Colombia |
Region | San Basilio de Palenque |
Ethnicity | 7,470 (2005)[1] |
Native speakers | 2,788 (2005)[2] |
Spanish Creole
| |
Latin (Spanish alphabet) | |
Official status | |
Official language in | The Colombian Constitution recognizes minority languages as "official in their territories."[3] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | pln |
Glottolog | pale1260 |
ELP | Palenquero |
Linguasphere | 51-AAC-bc |
Palenquero is a Spanish-African Creole language spoken in Colombia. Is it spoken primarily in the Northern and the Caribbean parts of Colombia; the palenque villages and their diasporas.
Palenquero, just like in the other Spanish-Based Caribbean Creoles, has influences from the contact between European masters and African slaves. In the case of Palenquero, it has been accepted that the maroons (escaped slaves) moved in somewhere in the mountains, along with some Native Americans. The maroons had very little contact with their masters, which led to them having to blend their African substrate languages with the Spanish European ones.
Palenquero has a lot of African influence in its sounds, phonetics, syntax, grammar, vocabulary, and a lot of words.
Lord's Prayer
The African languages that have had the most dominant influence on Palenquero is the languages of the Bantu, specifically the Kongo.
Cuban Creole Oriental is very similar to Palenquero. They even share some words.
Dominican Spanish is similar to Palenquero due to same origins.
Many of the Spanish-based Creoles can be compared to the other Creoles of the Americas, where there has been the blending of African and European languages.