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Creolese

Guyanese Creole
Canarsie +1
South AmericaGuyana flagGuyana
Guyanese independence from Britain in 1966, and the political and economic uncertainty that resulted, led to massive waves of immigration to New York — now a nerve center of the Guyanese diaspora. Among both Afro- and Indo-Guyanese, there are still speakers of Guyanese Creole, an English-based language similar to other Caribbean-based creoles with loanwords from African, Indian, Arawakan, and Dutch languages, though fewer young people speak it. Some Indo-Caribbean New Yorkers from Guyana, Trinidad, and Suriname may be familiar with Caribbean Hindustani.
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W

hile most Indo-Guyanese ended up in Queens, most Afro-Guyanese New Yorkers ultimately settled mostly among other Caribbean communities in Brooklyn (especially between Flatbush and Canarsie). The Guyana Cultural Association New York in Canarsie is one community institution.

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