FPE ISO 639-3
Equatorial Guinean Pidgin
Pichi Autonym
A language of Equatorial Guinea
- ISO 639
- fpe
- Alternate Names
- Criollo, Fernandino, Fernando Po Creole English, Fernando Po Krio, Pichinglis, Pidgin de Guinea Ecuatorial, Pidginglis
- Autonym
- Pichi
- Population
- 200,000, all users. L1 users: 15,000 (2020 S. Smith), increasing. L2 users: 185,000 (2020 S. Smith). Very few monolinguals.
- Location:
- Bioko Norte and Bioko Sur provinces: north central Bioko Island, Fernando Po, Malabo area; Balueri de Cristo Rey, Basupu, Fiston, Las Palmas, Musola, and Sampaca.
- Language Status
- 3 (Wider communication). Offshoot of Krio language of Sierra Leone; brought to Bioko with African settlers from Freetown, Sierra Leone in 1827. Used as LWC across Bioko island, including the capital city of Malabo, in all domains except education and government.
- Classification
- Creole, English based, Atlantic, Krio
- Dialects
- Pidgin, Pichi. Intelligible with Cameroon Pidgin [wes], Nigerian Pidgin [pcm], but it has 20% of its lexical inventory as loanwords from Spanish [spa].
- Language Use
- All domains except government. Used by all. Positive attitudes. All also use Spanish [spa]. Some also use English [eng], which is growing in importance for job opportunities. Also use Bube [bvb]. Used as L2 by Bube [bvb], Fa d’Ambu [fab], Fang [fan], Kombe [nui], Kwasio [nmg].
- Language Development
- Literacy rate in L1: Virtually none. Literacy rate in L2: 75% in Spanish [spa]. Dictionary. Grammar. Texts.
- Language Resources
- OLAC resources in and about Equatorial Guinean Pidgin
- Writing
- Latin script [Latn], used since 2006.
- Other Comments
- Pidgin is the acrolect, used mostly by mother tongue speakers, Pichi is the mesolect, used as a language of wider communication; there is also a basilect form, used by expatriate immigrants. Christian.
Also Spoken in
Map
Location: Bioko Norte and Bioko Sur provinces: north central Bioko Island, Fernando Po, Malabo area; Balueri de Cristo Rey, Basupu, Fiston, Las Palmas, Musola, and Sampaca.
Size and Vitality
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