There are two Portuguese creoles on the island of São Tomé, Angolar and Forro.
[2] Today, younger generations of São Toméans are not likely to speak Principense, which has led to its fast decline and moribund status.
[3] It is mostly spoken by the elderly (Ethnologue gives a figure of approximately 200 native speakers in total), while most of the island's community speaks noncreole Portuguese; some also speak another, closely related creole, Forro.
Like Forro, it is a creole language heavily lexified by Portuguese with substrates of Bantu and Kwa.
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