Languages of Antigua and Barbuda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The primary language spoken by the population of Antigua and Barbuda is Antiguan and Barbudan Creole.[1] In Antigua and Barbuda, no law establishes an official language.[2][3] English is the language of academic communication, and due to its widespread usage, it is considered the country's working language. Nearly all of the population is fluent in English.[4][5]

Creole dialects in Antigua and Barbuda

Antiguan and Barbudan Creole is the primary language spoken in the country. There are three primary dialects of the language in the country. The north Antiguan dialect, the south Antiguan dialect, and the Barbudan dialect. Antiguan and Barbudan Creole is natively spoken in most of the former British Leeward Islands. The south Antiguan dialect is only semi-intelligible with the rest of the Antiguan and Barbudan Creole dialects, primarily being spoken in Saint Mary and Swetes in Saint Paul. Barbudan Creole tends to be more distant from Antiguan Creole than the closer Montserrat Creole. While the language is widely spoken throughout the country and the rest of the Leeward Islands, attitudes towards it remain negative.[6][7][8]

The language also tends to have an urban-rural divide. As more Antiguans commute into St. John's, this divide has begun to disappear however, resulting in the emergence of the northern and southern dialects in the 1960s. Until the early 1960s, the dialects were largely based on the villages, and researchers noted that Antigua's inhabitants were able to identify what village someone resided in based on their speech patterns. Speakers of the northern dialect tend to view their dialect as the "standard dialect".[9] Antiguan and Barbudan Creole is more openly spoken by the lower and middle classes, while the upper classes tend to prefer standard English in public settings.[10]

English

  regions where any dialect of English is the language of the majority

English is spoken as a second language by the vast majority of the population, and is the unofficial language of academic communication. It is considered the country's de facto working language, and 6.12% of the population speaks it as their primary language.[11][5] The only non-trivial mentions of the English language in Antiguan and Barbudan primary legislation are in section 17 of the Constitution, where it is stated that any person detained must be furnished with a written statement in English and in their native language, and in sections 29 and 38 where it is stated that all members of parliament must be capable of reading the English language unless incapacitated by blindness.[12] In section 8 of the Standing Orders of the House of Representatives, it is also stated that the only language that may be used in parliamentary proceedings is English,[13] although an acrolectal form of Antiguan and Barbudan Creole is frequently spoken in parliament during intense debates.[14]

Foreign languages

Statistics

References

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