A creole language is a stable natural language developed from a mixture of different languages. Unlike a pidgin, a simplified form that develops as a means of communication between two or more groups, a creole language is a complete language, used in a community and acquired by children as their native language.
This list of creole languages links to Wikipedia articles about languages that linguistic sources identify as creoles. The "subgroups" list links to Wikipedia articles about language groups defined by the languages from which their vocabulary is drawn.
Bahamian Creole, English Creole spoken in The Bahamas
Bajan Creole or Barbadian Creole, English-based, spoken in Barbados
Belizean Creole, English-based creole spoken in Belize
Bislama, an English-based creole, spoken in Vanuatu
Gullah language, spoken in the coastal region of the US states of North and South Carolina, Georgia and northeast Florida
Guyanese Creole, English-based, spoken in Guyana
Hawaiian Creole or Pidgin, a mixture of Native Hawaiian and American English similar to Tok Pisin
Krio language, English-based creole spoken throughout the West African nation of Sierra Leone
Liberian Kreyol language, spoken in Liberia
Nigerian Creole English based creole or pidgin spoken in Nigeria
Pitkern, English spoken on the Pitcairn Islands and Norfolk Islands
Manglish English-based, spoken in Malaysia
Singlish, English-based, spoken in Singapore
Tok Pisin, an official language of Papua New Guinea
Torres Strait Creole or Brokan, spoken in far north-east Australia, Torres Strait, and south-west Papua
Trinidadian Creole, English-based, spoken in Trinidad
Sranan Tongo, a bridge language (lingua franca) spoken in Suriname
The Middle English creole hypothesis argues that English itself is a creole.
Antillean Creole French, French-based creole spoken in the French West Indies
Guianan Creole, French-based creole spoken in French Guiana
Haitian Creole, French-based, an official language of Haiti
Louisiana Creole French, spoken in Louisiana
Mauritian Creole, French-based, spoken in Mauritius
Seychellois Creole, French-based, spoken in the Seychelles
Reunionese French, Hindi, Malgasy based, in Reunion Island
Annobonese Creole, Portuguese-based creole spoken in Annobón, Equatorial Guinea
Cape Verdean Creole, spoken on the islands of Cape Verde
Forro Creole, spoken in São Tomé and Príncipe
Macanese Patois, or Macau creole, Pátua, once spoken in Macau Portuguese community
Papiamento, spoken in the ABC islands in the southern Caribbean
Upper Guinea Creole, spoken in Guinea-Bissau
Andaman Creole Hindi - is a Hindustani-based creole language spoken in the Andaman islands.
Chavacano - is a Spanish-based creole language spoken in the Philippines.
Hokaglish - is predominantly Chinese-based creole (?) spoken by Filipino-Chinese across the Philippines, although English and Tagalog may also be the base.
Hezhou, based on Uyghur and relexified by Mandarin
Nagamese Creole, based on Assamese, used in Nagaland, India
Negerhollands, a Dutch-based creole, once spoken in the U.S. Virgin Islands
Sango language, Ngbandi-based creole language spoken in the Central African Republic
Unserdeutsch language, a German-based creole language spoken primarily in Papua New Guinea
Arabic-based creole languages, a creole language which was significantly influenced by the Arabic language
Dutch-based creole languages, a creole language that has been substantially influenced by the Dutch language
English-based creole languages, a creole language derived from the English language
French-based creole languages, a creole language based on the French language
Malay-based creole languages, regional varieties derived from a lingua franca called Bazaar Malay
Portuguese-based creole languages, creole languages which have Portuguese as superstrate language
Spanish-based creole languages, a number of creole languages are based on the Spanish language
List of creole languages Wikipedia (Text) CC BY-SA