A post-creole continuum (or simply creole continuum) is a dialect continuum of varieties of a creole language between those most and least similar to the superstrate language (that is, a closely related language whose speakers assert or asserted dominance of some sort). Due to social, political, and economic factors, a creole language can decreolization towards one of the languages from which it is descended, aligning its morphology, phonology, and syntax to the local standard of the dominant language but to different degrees depending on a speaker's status.
The following table (from ) shows the 18 different ways of rendering the phrase I gave him one in Guyanese Creole:
The continuum shown has the acrolect form as (which is identical with Standard English) while the basilect form is . Due to code-switching, most speakers have a command of a range in the continuum and, depending on social position, occupation, etc. can implement the different levels with various levels of skill.
If a society is so stratified as to have little to no contact between groups who speak the creole and those who speak the superstrate (dominant) language, a situation of diglossia occurs, rather than a continuum. Assigning separate and distinct functions for the two varieties will have the same effect. This is the case in Haiti with Haitian Creole and French language.
Use of the terms acrolect, mesolect and basilect attempts to avoid the Value judgment inherent in earlier terminology, by which the language spoken by the ruling classes in a capital city was defined as the "correct" or "pure" form while that spoken by the lower classes and inhabitants of outlying provinces was "a dialect" characterised as "incorrect", "impure" or "debased".
In Jamaica, a continuum exists between Jamaican English and Jamaican Patois.
In Haiti, the acrolect is Haitian French and the basilect has been standardized as Haitian Creole.
Meanwhile, in southern Africa, Afrikaans is a codified mesolect, or a partial creole, with the acrolect (standard Dutch language) stripped of official status decades ago, having been used for only religious purposes.
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