Which is the term for a completely structured language that develops from a blending of native languages and introduced languages?

a. Pidgin
b. Creole
c. Esperanto
d. Dialect***

No.

is it a?

It could be either pidgin or Creole. Check your text.

The term for a completely structured language that develops from a blending of native languages and introduced languages is b. Creole.

To arrive at this answer, we can approach it by process of elimination:

a. Pidgin: A pidgin is a simplified language that emerges as a means of communication between groups of people who do not share a common language. Pidgins are not typically completely structured or complex enough to be considered a language on their own.

c. Esperanto: Esperanto is not a language that develops from a blending of native languages and introduced languages. It is a constructed language created by L. L. Zamenhof in the late 19th century as an attempt to create a neutral and easy-to-learn international language.

d. Dialect: A dialect refers to a regional or social variety of a language that differs in pronunciation, vocabulary, and grammar from other varieties of the same language. While a dialect can develop from a blending of languages, it does not specifically refer to a completely structured language resulting from such blending.

Therefore, out of the given options, the correct answer is b. Creole.