- Berbice Creole Dutch
Infobox Language
name=Berbice Dutch Creole
region=Guyana
speakers=4 or 5 (as of|1993) [Kouwenberg: p. 233.]
familycolor=Creole
fam1=Creole language
fam2=Dutch Creole
iso2=crp
iso3=brcBerbice Dutch Creole is Dutch-based creole language of
Guyana . It has alexicon partly based on a dialect of the West African language ofIjaw .After the conquest of English Guyana by the Dutch in
1664 and the subsequentTreaty of Westminster (1674) in which the English handed it over in exchange forNew Amsterdam , the coastal areas came under Dutch cultural influence. However, this influence was rather slight, and did not reach much further than the town ofBerbice . When the colony was reconquered by the British in Napoleonic times and split up into Dutch and British parts after the Vienna Congress, the Berbice slaves kept speaking Creole Dutch among themselves, until the language came in decay in the 20th century. As of 1993 there were some 4 or 5 elderly speakers of the language, although other sources report tens of speakers.Berbice Creole Dutch is, as are "
Negerhollands " (extinct) andSkepi Creole Dutch (with a similar preservation status as Berbice Dutch), not based onHollandic Dutch (the dialect that is closest toStandard Dutch ) but onZeelandic .Phonology
Vowels
There is a large degree of
free variation in the vowels, with the range of realizations of the phonemes overlapping.IPA|/e/ and IPA|/ɛ/ are almost in
complementary distribution , and were probablyallophone s at an earlier stage of the language.Consonants
IPA| [ʃ] is usually in
complementary distribution with IPA| [s] , occurring only before IPA|/i/, but there are a handful of exceptions.IPA|/v/ and IPA|/z/ occur only in
loanword s fromGuyanese Creole .Notes
References
*cite book |author=Kouwenberg, Silvia |year=1994 |chapter=Berbice Dutch |editor=Jacques Arends, Pieter Muysken & Norval Smith |title=Pidgins and Creoles: An Introduction |publisher=John Benjamins |pages=233–243
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