ENSIKLOPEDIA Cari Tekan Enter untuk memulai pencarian cepat. Kembali ke Ensiklopedia Arsip Wikipedia Indonesia Agalega Creole Agalega creoleMauritian Creole dialect of Agaléga Agalega CreolekreolNative toAgalega IslandsNative speakers<1,000[citation needed]Language familyFrench Creole Bourbonnais CreolesMauritian CreoleAgalega CreoleLanguage codesISO 639-3None (mis)Linguist Listmfe-agaGlottologNoneIETFmfe-u-sd-muag Agalega creole is a creole language influenced by French spoken in Agalega.[1] It has been heavily influenced by both Mauritian Creole and Seychellois Creole, as well as Malagasy. The population of speakers number just under 1,000.[citation needed] See also Africa portalLanguages portal Creole language Rodriguan creole Mauritian creole Chagossian creole References ↑ "Maurice : Agaléga, archipel convoité par l'Inde". archive.wikiwix.com. Retrieved 2022-06-15. vteFrench-based creole languages and pidgins by continentAfrica Burundi Pidgin Nouchi Petit Mauresque Petit nègre Americas Antillean Dominican Grenadian Guadeloupe Martinican Saint Lucian Haitian Louisiana Guianese Karipúna Lanc-Patuá Michif Belle Isle Asia Tây Bồi Indian Ocean Bourbonnais Agalega Chagossian Mauritian Réunion Rodriguan Seychellois Oceania Tayo vteGallo-Romance languages and dialectsAreal groups Canadian French* Langues d'oïlAntillean Creole Dominican Grenadian Saint Lucian Bourbonnais Creoles Agalega Chagossian Mauritian Réunion Rodriguan Seychellois French* Acadian Chiac St. Marys Bay African* Abidjan Kinshasa Aostan Belgian Métis New England Québécois* Joual Magoua Cambodian Francien Frenchville Haitian Houma French Indian Jersey Legal Laotian Middle French Meridional Metropolitan* Missouri Muskrat Newfoundland Ontarian Saint-Barthélemy Saint Pierre and Miquelon Standard Swiss Vietnamese Norman Anglo-Norman Augeron Auregnais Cauchois Cotentinais Guernésiais Jèrriais Law French Old Norman Sercquiais Others Angevin Berrichon Bolze Bourbonnais Burgundian Burundi Pidgin Camfranglais Champenois Frainc-Comtou Gallo Guianese Haitian Creole* Karipúna Creole Labrador Inuit Pidgin Lorrain Welche Louisiana Creole Louisiana French Michif Moselle Romance Nouchi Old French Orléanais Petit nègre Picard Poitevin-Saintongeais Poitevin Saintongeais Tayo Tây Bồi Walloon Wisconsin Walloon Zarphatic Francoprovencalic Faetar-Cigliàje Franco-Provençal/Arpitan Mâconês Savoyard Valdôtain Vâlsoanin Italics indicate extinct languages or dialects A star (*) indicates varieties with more than 5 million speakers Languages between parentheses are varieties of the language on their left.