Belter Creole
0 sources
Belter Creole
Summary
Belter Creole is a fictional language[1]. It draws 294 Wikipedia views per month (fictional_language category, ranking #7 of 24).[2]
Key Facts
- Belter Creole is the creator of Nick Farmer[3].
- Belter Creole is the creator of James S. A. Corey[4].
- Belter Creole's instance of is recorded as fictional language[5].
- Belter Creole's instance of is recorded as creole[6].
- Belter Creole's instance of is recorded as lingua franca[7].
- Belter Creole's subclass of is recorded as English-based creole languages[8].
- Belter Creole's writing system is recorded as Latin script[9].
- Belter Creole's IETF language tag is recorded as art-x-belter[10].
- Belter Creole's Wikimedia language code is recorded as art-blt[11].
- Belter Creole's Wikimedia language code is recorded as art-bel[12].
- +2015-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Belter Creole[13].
- Belter Creole's contributor to the creative work or subject is recorded as Eric Armstrong[14].
- Belter Creole's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Belter Creole language[15].
- Belter Creole's described at URL is recorded as https://database.conlang.org/view/?conlang=91[16].
- Belter Creole's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'mis', 'text': 'Lang Belta'}[17].
- Belter Creole's indigenous to is recorded as Belters[18].
- Belter Creole's hashtag is recorded as LangBelta[19].
- Belter Creole's subreddit is recorded as LangBelta[20].
- Belter Creole's Fandom article ID is recorded as expanse:Belter_Creole[21].
- Belter Creole's created for is recorded as The Expanse[22].
Body
Works and Contributions
Created works include Nick Farmer[3], a short story writer[23], of United States[24] and James S. A. Corey[4], a duo[25].
Why It Matters
Belter Creole draws 294 Wikipedia views per month (fictional_language category, ranking #7 of 24).[2] It is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]