Language is an effective tool for exerting control and battles can be fought on the linguistic terrain
There are
also a number of creoles and local patois. Dozens of the creole languages of
the Caribbean are widely used informally among the general population. There
are also a few additional smaller indigenous languages. Many of the indigenous
languages have become extinct or are dying out. At odds with the ever-growing
desire for a single Caribbean community, the linguistic diversity of a few
Caribbean islands has made language policy an issue in the post-colonial era.
In recent years, Caribbean islands have become aware of a linguistic
inheritance of sorts. However, language policies being developed nowadays are
mostly aimed at multilingualism.
Most
languages spoken in the Caribbean are either European languages (namely
English, Spanish, French, and Dutch) or European language-based creoles. Spanish-speakers
are the most numerous in the Caribbean. English is the first or second language
in most Caribbean islands and is also the unofficial "language of
tourism", the dominant industry in the Caribbean region. In the Caribbean,
the official language is usually determined by whichever colonial power
(England, Spain, France, or the Netherlands) held sway over the island first or
longest.
The first
permanent English colonies were founded at Saint Kitts (1624) and Barbados
(1627). The English language is the third most established throughout the
Caribbean; however, due to the relatively small populations of the
English-speaking territories, only 14% of West Indians are English speakers.
English is the official language of about 18 Caribbean territories inhabited by
about 6 million people, though most inhabitants of these islands may more
properly be described as speaking English creoles rather than local varieties
of standard English.
Spanish was
introduced to the Caribbean with the voyages of discovery of Christopher
Columbus in 1492. The Caribbean English-speakers are outnumbered by Spanish
speakers by a ratio of about four to one due to the high densities of
populations on the larger, Spanish-speaking, islands; some 64% of West Indians
speak Spanish. The countries that are included in this group are Cuba, the
Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and some islands off Central America.
(Cozumel,
Isla Mujeres, San Andrés and Providencia, Corn Islands, The Bay Islands) and
South America (Federal Dependencies of Venezuela and Nueva Esparta). About
one-quarter of West Indians speak French or a French-based creole. They live
primarily in Guadeloupe and Martinique, both of which are overseas departments
of France; Saint Barthélemy and the French portion of Saint Martin (where the
local language is English, but not an official language), both of which are
overseas collectivities of France; the independent nation of Haiti (where both
French and Haitian Creole are official languages); and the independent nations
of Dominica and Saint Lucia, which are both officially English-speaking but
where the French-based Antillean Creole is widely used, and French to a lesser
degree. Dutch is an official language of the Caribbean islands that remain
under Dutch sovereignty. However, Dutch is not the dominant language on these
islands. On the islands of Aruba, Curaçao and Bonaire, a creole based on
Portuguese, Spanish and West African languages known as Papiamento is
predominant, while in Sint Maarten, Saba and Sint Eustatius, English, as well
as a local English creole, are spoken. A Dutch creole known as Negerhollands
was spoken in the former Danish West Indian islands of Saint Thomas and Saint
John, but is now extinct. Its last native speaker died in 1987
For More Answers Get
Solved PDF WhatsApp – 8130208920
0 comments:
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.