VI
U.S. Virgin Islands
Summary:
U.S. Virgin Islands is a territory in the Americas that is home to 87,100 people. It is also home to 1 living indigenous language, Virgin Islands English Creole. It was also home to 1 indigenous language that is now extinct. In addition, 3 living non-indigenous languages are established within the territory. One of these, English, is also an official language.
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Explore all 4 languages used in U.S. Virgin Islands with Ethnologue: Languages of U.S. Virgin Islands—a downloadable PDF document that provides detailed analysis presented in formats not available in the online version of Ethnologue. It includes:
- Comprehensive country overview.
- Statistical summaries by language status, size, and family.
- Alphabetical listing of languages in the country, with in-depth descriptions.
- Full-color language map(s) for visual reference.
- Listings by population, status, family, and region.
- Indexes of ISO 639 codes and alternate language names.
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Indigenous Languages
Families
The indigenous languages of U.S. Virgin Islands belong to the following families.
Creole (2)
