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'''Cannanore Indo-Portuguese''' is an [[Indo-Portuguese creole]] spoken on the [[Malabar coast]] of India. It formed from contact between the [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] and [[Malayalam]] languages in Indo-Portuguese households in the city of [[Cannanore]] (Kannur). In 2010 it was estimated to have five native speakers remaining. But there are around twenty or more who are dispersed in India and other parts of the worls.<ref name="OM">Hugo Cardoso, [http://www.openthemagazine.com/article/art-culture/the-death-of-an-indian-born-language "The Death of an Indian-born Language"], ''Open Magazine,'' October 30, 2010.</ref> It formed after the [[Cochin Indo-Portuguese]].{{fix|text=Does this mean in time, or that it derived from Cochin IP?}}
'''Cannanore Indo-Portuguese''' is an [[Indo-Portuguese creole]] spoken on the [[Malabar coast]] of India. It formed from contact between the [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] and [[Malayalam]] languages in Indo-Portuguese households in the city of [[Cannanore]] (Kannur). In 2010 it was estimated to have five native speakers remaining. <ref name="OM">Hugo Cardoso, [http://www.openthemagazine.com/article/art-culture/the-death-of-an-indian-born-language "The Death of an Indian-born Language"], ''Open Magazine,'' October 30, 2010.</ref> It formed after the [[Cochin Indo-Portuguese]].{{fix|text=Does this mean in time, or that it derived from Cochin IP?}}


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 12:09, 14 September 2020

Cannanore Indo-Portuguese
Native toIndia
RegionCannanore (Kannur)
Native speakers
20 or more dispersed around India and the world) (2010)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone

Cannanore Indo-Portuguese is an Indo-Portuguese creole spoken on the Malabar coast of India. It formed from contact between the Portuguese and Malayalam languages in Indo-Portuguese households in the city of Cannanore (Kannur). In 2010 it was estimated to have five native speakers remaining. [1] It formed after the Cochin Indo-Portuguese.[Does this mean in time, or that it derived from Cochin IP?]

References

  1. ^ a b Hugo Cardoso, "The Death of an Indian-born Language", Open Magazine, October 30, 2010.