Site Details

Español Dominicano

Dominican Spanish
Perth Amboy (NJ)
CaribbeanDominican Republic flagDominican Republic
Census
New York City is home to a tremendous diversity of Spanish varieties, largely mutually intelligible but highly distinctive along regional, ethnic, and local lines — for this map, as among speakers themselves, national distinctions (e.g. Peruvian Spanish, Colombian Spanish) are used even though these do not completely capture the nature of the diversity. In general, Caribbean Spanish varieties were dominant for most of the 20th century due to the large Puerto Rican and Dominican populations but today the range of Spanish varieties is becoming ever more various.
Read more
T

he New York metropolitan area is home to what is by far the largest Dominican community outside the Dominican Republic, including hundreds of thousands of speakers of the island's distinctive variety of Caribbean Spanish. Though individuals came much earlier, the majority of Dominican New Yorkers today arrived beginning in the 1970s and 80s. Washington Heights remains a major center, though many have moved north into Inwood and the Bronx, and today every borough and many nearby suburbs have a substantial Dominican community. An earlier community in Corona, including especially of immigrants from the province of Cibao and even particular villages within it, has been expanding to Woodhaven, Cypress Hills, and East New York and increasingly now the smaller cities and suburbs of Westchester and New Jersey.

Note that the language above may be used throughout the New York area — this is just one significant site.
SearchExploreDataCensusInfo

© Mapbox © OpenStreetMap Improve this map

Español Dominicano

Dominican Spanish

Data

Search
Local community data
View in map
County
Language
Endonym
World Region
Country
Global Speakers
Language Family
Video
Audio
Location
Size
Status
Filter
Filter
Filter
Filter
Filter
Filter
​
​
No communities found. Try fewer criteria or click the "Clear filters" button to reset the table.

Rows per page:

20 rows

0-0 of 0

0-0 of 0
Press space bar to start a drag. When dragging you can use the arrow keys to move the item around and escape to cancel. Some screen readers may require you to be in focus mode or to use your pass through key

An urban language map

Welcome to Languages of New York City, a free and interactive digital map of the world’s most linguistically diverse metropolitan area.

All data, unless otherwise specified, is from the Endangered Language Alliance (ELA), based on information from communities, speakers, and other sources.

The map is a work in progress and a partial snapshot, focused on significant sites for Indigenous, minority, and endangered languages. Larger languages are represented selectively. To protect the privacy of speakers, some locations are slightly altered. Social media users, note that LANGUAGEMAP.NYC works best in a separate browser. We apologize that the map may not be fully accessible to all users, including the visually impaired.

This map was created by the Mapping Linguistic Diversity team, with core support from the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies and the Endangered Language Alliance. Please send feedback!

By continuing I acknowledge that I have read and accept the above information.