¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Creolised
1. creolise [v] - See also: creolise
Lexicographical Neighbors of Creolised
Literary usage of Creolised
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Women in South African History: Basus'iimbokodo, Bawel'imilambo / They by Nomboniso Gasa (2007)
"This contradiction revolves around slavery which positions Afrikaans as part of
creolised coloured history and experience, but not in the same manner as it ..."
2. All the Year Round by Charles Dickens (1872)
"All the tens she gives in their numerical form, coupled with the creolised
adjective " pelas," or shaven, because the ciphers in these numbers are thought ..."
3. Transatlantic Sketches, Comprising Visits to the Most Interesting Scenes in by James Edward Alexander (1833)
"To prove that the yellow fever is not a contagious disease, creolised or acclimated
inhabitants of the Antilles are very seldom attacked by it. ..."
4. The Medico-chirurgical Review by James Johnson, Henry James Johnson (1846)
"It rarely affects the creolised white inhabitants of the West Indies, and e
coloured classes never. How is this ?—asks our author. ..."
5. What Holds Us Together: Social Cohesion in South Africa by David Chidester, Philip Dexter (2004)
"As a result, new identities - hybrid, creolised - have emerged under colonial
conditions, a hybridisation, creolisation and even kinship in which both ..."
6. The Medico-chirurgical Review, and Journal of Practical Medicine (1846)
"It rarely affects the creolised white inhabitants of the West Indies, and be
coloured classes never. How is this ?—asks our author. ..."
7. The pearl of the Antilles; or, An artist in Cuba by Walter Goodman (1873)
"All the tens she gives in their numerical form, coupled with the creolised
adjective ' pelao,' or shaven, because the ciphers in these numbers are thought ..."