Skip to main content
1. "Creepy People"
2. Creepers
3. Stalkers
Haneen, you're such a creople! Stop stalking Robert Pattinson!
Creople by mlugar November 5, 2009
Related Words
creepy people, founded 2007, trademark owned by Creople LLC. Website www.creople.com
Creople...You fu%kin twit, you wrote a bad review of my business and you are the one that sucks, so kiss my ass!
creople by BackAtcha4 October 13, 2011
Narcissistic people that refuse to sign up for social media sights/apps (for example Facebook), but log on daily from other peoples accounts, to see status updates from users. These "creople" assume everyones status updates are about them.
Those kind of creople think the world revolves around them.
Creople by krzeudonym June 14, 2013
A mixture of the words creepy and people. Used to describe a creepy person. Plural: creoples
There creoples outside our window...we should throw orange peels at them
creople by mmmtoast May 8, 2010
A group of individuals that are/have doing/done unnatural, questionable, and/or cultural activities.
They are some creople, alright. Last time; I saw them in some sort of cult, speaking in some unknown language, and that gave me goosebumps.
Creople by Ix Compilations March 24, 2021
Louisiana Creole refers to native born people of various racial descent who are descended from the Colonial French and/or Spanish settlers of Colonial French Louisiana, before it became part of the United States in 1803 with the Louisiana Purchase with claim to the Creole culture and Creole cuisine. The commonly accepted definition today is for the community whose members are a mixture of mainly French, Spanish, African, and Native-American heritage. Some may not have each ethnic heritage, and some may have additional ancestries. Contrary to popular belief, a Creole does not exclusively pertain to a person of African and European: French or Spanish descent.

Historically, Creole was used in early generations to refer to colonists of French descent who had been born in Louisiana and were thus native to the territory, compared to new immigrants. It then meant exclusively people of European descent. It also was used for black slaves who were born in Louisiana as opposed to those born in West Africa and transported from there. French Creole became the term for those of exclusively French descent after there grew a Creole population of mixed ancestry. Many multiracial Creoles of French descent also call themselves French Creole.

People of relatively pure African-American, French or Spanish descent who have family roots in Louisiana and were raised under the Creole culture also have called themselves Creole. Today Louisiana Creole has come to mean those people of mixed ancestry.
I Am Creole , Creole Is My First Language : Laissez Les Bon Temps Roulez (Rouler) .

Translation: Let The Good Times Roll :)
Creole by ILoveBeingCreole August 21, 2010