Garifuna language

Garifuna
Native toNorth Coast of Honduras and Guatemala, Belize, Nicaragua's Mosquito Coast
RegionHistorically the Northern Caribbean coast of Central America from Belize to Nicaragua
EthnicityGarifuna people
Native speakers
120,000 (2001–2019)[1]
Arawakan
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3cab
Glottologgari1256
ELPGarífuna
Language, dance and music of the Garifuna
CountryBelize, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua
Reference00001
Inscription history
Inscription2001 (2008 session)
Recording of a Garifuna speaker

Garifuna (Karif) is a minority language widely spoken in villages of Garifuna people in the western part of the northern coast of Central America.

It is a member of the Arawakan language family but an atypical one since it is spoken outside the Arawakan language area, which is otherwise now confined to the northern parts of South America, and because it contains an unusually high number of loanwords, from both Carib languages and a number of European languages because of an extremely tumultuous past involving warfare, migration and colonization.

The language was once confined to the Antillean islands of St. Vincent and Dominica, but its speakers, the Garifuna people, were deported by the British in 1797 to the north coast of Honduras[2] from where the language and Garifuna people has since spread along the coast south to Nicaragua and north to Guatemala and Belize.

Parts of Garifuna vocabulary are split between men's speech and women's speech, and some concepts have two words to express them, one for women and one for men. Moreover, the terms used by men are generally loanwords from Carib while those used by women are Arawak.

The Garifuna language was declared a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity in 2008 along with Garifuna music and dance.[3]

  1. ^ Garifuna at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) Closed access icon
  2. ^ Dreyfus-Gamelon, Simone (1993). "Et Christophe Colomb vint...". Ethnies. Chroniques d'une conquête (14): 104.
  3. ^ "Language, dance and music of the Garifuna". unesco.org. 2008. Retrieved 1 January 2015.

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