(of a language) incorporating a considerable range of features from one or more unrelated languages, as the result of contact between language communities
creolized in American English
(ˈkriəˌlaizd)
adjective
(of a language)
formerly a pidgin but now the native language of a group of speakers, with consequent enrichment of the vocabulary by borrowing and creation
Word origin
[1875–80; creolize + -ed2]This word is first recorded in the period 1875–80. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: cross-fertilization, fan-tan, neoclassic, overdraft, weekender-ed is a suffix forming the past participle of weak verbs (he had crossed the river), and of participial adjectives indicating a condition or quality resulting fromthe action of the verb (inflated balloons). Other words that use the affix -ed include: connected, frosted, sheltered, truncated, unsettled
Examples of 'creolized' in a sentence
creolized
In particular, the authors analyze the techniques of meaning distortions of text information, visual images, and creolized texts.
Yulia R. Tagiltseva, Irina V. Vorobyeva, Olga V. Kruzhkova, Dmitriy V. Rudenkin, MarinaR. Babikova, Darya M. Nikiforova 2019, 'Internet Mechanisms of Involvement in Extremist Communities as a Threat to Socializationof Contemporary Youth', Российский психологический журналhttps://rpj.ru.com/index.php/rpj/article/view/808. Retrieved from DOAJ CC BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode)