- published: 02 May 2015
- views: 1679
Taíno is a language historically spoken by the Taíno people of the Caribbean. At the time of Spanish colonization, it was the principal language throughout the Caribbean. Classic Taíno (Taíno proper) was the native language of the northern Leeward Islands, Puerto Rico, the Turks and Caicos Islands, and most of Hispaniola, and was expanding into Cuba. Ciboney is essentially unattested, but colonial sources suggest it was a dialect of Taíno. It was the language of westernmost Hispaniola, the Bahamas, Jamaica, and most of Cuba.
By the late 15th century, Taíno/Ciboney had displaced earlier languages except for western Cuba and pockets in Hispaniola. As the Taíno declined during Spanish colonization, the language was replaced with Spanish and other European languages. As the first native language encountered by Europeans in the New World, it was a major source of new words borrowed into European languages.
Granberry & Vescelius (2004) distinguish two dialects, one on Hispaniola and further east, and the other on Hispaniola and further west.
Introduction to Exploring the Taino Language, featuring Rene. Enjoy
Northwest Indian Language Institute (NILI) revitalization program for Native American languages at the University of Oregon. Dr. Richard Morrow Porrata gives a narrative on the Taino language and sacramental records at the San German de Auxerre Church in Puerto Rico, which holds records identifying parishioners from the 1700's as Taino.
The Tainos are the indigenous people of the Caribbean, including part of Florida. We are different from Hispanics and Latinos. Hispanics are people from Spain. Latinos are people from Southern Europe. Before 1492, there were no Afrikans or Spaniards on our land, or people of any other race. There were only Tainos. Some people may think of us as "Native Americans" or "American Indians". While the etymology of these terms can be debated, this is correct. "Latino" comes from "Latin". Latin is the root language of all the Southern European languages, known as the "romance languages". From "Latin America" comes the colonial identity "Latino". The term "Latin America" was coined by the French economist, Michel Chevalier. It was a political move to ally the conquered now Spanish-speaking and Por...
The video pursues the last remaining speakers of the Lokono language, otherwise known as Arawak, in Guyana. I does so on the Essequibo Coast in the area of Mainstay/Tapakuma and Wakapoa on the Pomeroon River. Of the 20,000 ethnic Arawaks in Guyana, only a diminishing number of people over 60 years of age can speak the language. This is a dying language. The video seeks to alert us to this tragedy of the 'Silencing of the Tongues' through interviews with some of the last speakers of the language and hearing the language spoken. The interviews were conducted by Ian Robertson, Hubert Devonish & Daidrah Smith
The Relationship between the Taino and Arawak Language, featuring Jerry.
This performance is an account of basically true events. There was a famine, so the chieftain goes to find new hunting grounds. In the meantime his wife (Yenia) dies of starvation. The witch manages to bring her back to life with his craft (if he fails he is killed). Then they all celebrate. For engagements, please contact the manager directly: Juan Carlos Gonzáles Acuña.H: 1-53-45-26-0721. C: 1-53--60-0187
5 year old Turey Aná and 3 year old Güey Karaya share the Taino Word of the Day as they take on a family project to learn words from this beautiful indigenous language from their native land Boriken also known today as the island of Puerto Rico.
Addressing elder Pedro Guanikeyu on Language, as a disclaimer the following discussion is not to discredit his position in the community but to give some clarity regarding his comments between the Language of the Classic Taino and the Kalinago. As well as his opinion in comparing the respective languages.
Atabeira is Mother Earth (Madre Tierra) in our Taino Language. She is also known as Caguana and the Mother of Fertility (La Madre de la Fertilida). The Mother who gives birth to us , we all come from EARTH (La Tierra). And the Mother who feeds us all. La Madre que nos alimenta. From the Earth we eat. ARROYO PRODUCTIONS/ GUARIBO NABORIA
Excuse the language !!!!
Taino Prayer, Oracion Taina para Yucaju & Atabeira El Padre Nuestro en lengua Taino y Oracion a Atabeira Atabey, también llamada Atabex o Atabeyra, es la madre de Yocahú, señor de la yuca, sin antecedentes masculinos. Yocahú, dios de la yuca. Yocahú vive en el cielo, es un ser inmortal al que nadie puede ver, tiene madre -Atabey- pero no principio. Es el espíritu de la yuca, representado por un "Trigonolito", o "Dios de tres puntas", su nombre indígena es Yocahú, o Yucahú-Guamá, ceremonialmente se le llamaba Yocahú-Bagua-Maorocoti, "Yocahú" puede leerse como "Señor de la yuca", por cuanto el sufijo -hu, significaría señor yyoca, una variante de la palabra yuca;"bagua": "mar" y "maorocoti", sin abuelo, sin antecesor masculino; "Señor de la yuca y el agua, sin predecesor masculino". El t...
5 year old Turey Aná and 3 year old Güey Karaya share the Taino Word of the Day as they take on a family project to learn words from this beautiful indigenous language from their native land Boriken also known today as the island of Puerto Rico.
5 year old Turey Aná and 3 year old Güey Karaya share the Taino Word of the Day as they take on a family project to learn words from this beautiful indigenous language from their native land Boriken also known today as the island of Puerto Rico.
5 year old Turey Aná shares the Taino Word of the Day as she and her younger sister take on a family project to learn words from this beautiful indigenous language from their native land Boriken also known today as the island of Puerto Rico.
Jay Winter Nightwolf (Jay Gola Wahya Sunoyi) Cherokee, Taino and Shoshone, is host of "The American Indian's Truths - Nightwolf - the Most Dangerous Show On Radio" WPFW 89.3 FM - Pacifica Radio Here he interviews José Barreiro (Taino Cuba), director of the Office of Latin America at the National Museum of the American Indian, Juan Carlos Martínez Cruzado, Biologist/Genecist and Alex Zacarias, Filmmaker of The Lost Taino Tribe after a symposium which featured representative speakers from a multidisciplinary delegation of scholars on Taíno and Caribbean indigenous themes who discussed the survival of Taíno language, identity, and material culture in contemporary Caribbean consciousness. In August of 2011 the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, DC held a sy...
A filmmaker’s clandestine expedition through the communist island of Cuba in search of an indigenous tribe rumored extinct for over three centuries. According to most historical accounts the Taínos, native people of Caribbean islands like Puerto Rico, Hispañola, and Cuba, became extinct shortly after the arrival of the Spaniards in 1492. After hearing a rumor about the existence of a surviving tribe in Guantanamo, Cuba, filmmakers Dre Torres and Tony Cortes travel to the communist country to find out the truth. What results is a dangerous covert voyage through the highly restricted mountains of Yateras despite the orders of Cuban military officials. Order DVD http://tinyurl.com/tainodvd -- Mangas Films presents a Mangas Films production in association with Burumba Entertainment a film b...
Cihuapilli Rose Amador LeBeau and Craig Pasqua interviews Ray Baeza Techicuauhtli (Mexíca/Taíno) on Native Voice TV. This interview begins with ethnology of Taíno and Mexíca, cultural genocide, revitalizing tribal language hence leading to cultural ceremonies, most spoken language - 'Nahuatl'; and ends with a detail explanation of the 'Azteca/Mexíca' New Year.
The world is round. Europe lied and said it was flat. We believed. When will we stop believing in LIES. The Americas was completely and densely populated by black, brown, and light-skinned men centuries before the Europeans. But the European has lied in the his story books.
Whitest Taíno Alive takes everything that makes the island’s city-life vibe, with the universal language of heavy beats under the local lingo of Santo Domingo. On production, we have Cohoba, a bastion of multicultural references, that has represented the DR in the musical melting pot that is the Red Bull Music Academy. The approach he has to mixing all his influences is on point, with that hip-hop groove, electronic sharpness and precision, plus that ‘sazón’ and that swing you just can’t escape from in the caribbean. On the mic we’ve got Jon Blon Jovi (Haru), who’s been around as a dj for more than 15 years, co-founder of the OndaSonora dj collective and 28°C, two of the biggest names in the dominican party scene and Dominicanye West (César Pineda), a drummer, bass player, singer and sou...
(SPANISH LANGUAGE) Interview with Professor Juan Manuel Delgado, a historian, discusses the fallacy of the Taino extinction. This is part 1 of 2 of a one hour interview. Entrevista con Profesor Juan Manuel Delgado, historiador, analiza la falacia de la extinción Taína. Parte 1 de 2 entrevista de una hora.