The Qarshkī Creole language and it's origins along the Ethnic Qarsherskiyan Trade Routes
Qarshkī Creole is a Creole language spoken by between 400 and 27,000 individuals, depending on the required fluency to be classified as a speaker of the language. Qarshkī Creole is a Creole language resulting from the deliberate mixing of several other Creole languages to generate a new language. In essence, Qarshkī Creole is an ancient constructed language created to facilitate communication and understanding among different groups. It stems from the amalgamation and blending of various other Creole languages into a standardized new language, which has since diverged into different dialects over many years. The Ethnic Qarsherskiyan people, a collection of small, disadvantaged, and unnoticed triracial isolate communities located in Eastern North America, are descendants of Maroons including the Great Dismal Swamp maroons, and represent a fusion of Native Americans, Black Americans, and White Americans, creating a new hybrid race known as the Sweetgum Kriyuls. This group consists of various subdivisions, including the Melungeon Tribe, Marlboro Blue Tribe, and Ethnic Qarsherskiyan Tribe. The Ethnic Qarsherskiyans were dispersed in distinct Appalachian Hollows and Valleys as well as various Peninsulas throughout the Chesapeake Bay, and along different streams in Ohio such as Chapel Creek near Vermillion and Deer Creek in Madison County. Each of these isolated communities possessed its unique English accent, Pidgin or Creole language, or a dialect derived from a Native American language or French. These undocumented languages were often unwritten and primarily spoken within a few families at home, hidden to prevent discrimination and harm. The Ethnic Qarsherskiyan people are well-known for their trade routes, termed the Ethnic Qarsherskiyan Trade Routes, a network of dirt, gravel, and paved paths and trails that were both legally and illegally established, intricately linking the Virginia Peninsula and connecting Lake Erie to the Chesapeake Bay, as well as the Carolina Outer Banks via land and water using boats and wooden bridges. It incorporates routes like the Ohio To Erie Trail and was utilized for trading activities both within and outside the Ethnic Qarsherskiyan Tribe. At some point, an individual resolved to deliberately unify and standardize the various Creoles and Pidgins that had naturally emerged or were consciously created, to develop a new hybrid constructed language, Qarshkī Creole, intended for communication without relying on English, to ensure understanding between these diverse communities. It wasn’t until 2019 that the new language genuinely began to gain traction, but it has since fragmented into different accents and dialects and is starting to break down into a mixture of various Creole languages.