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Caribs or Canibs?
THE West Indians are called Caribbeans after the Carib American
Indians who lived on many islands, in what we now call West
Indies. Their name was also given to the adjoining sea that came
to be known as the Caribbean Sea.
Today, the term Caribbean is used to designate a linguistic group
that includes not only the language of the Caribs but also many
related American Indian languages spoken in South America.
Caribs were American Indian people who inhabited the islands and
parts of the neighbouring South American coast at the time of the
Spanish conquest. Strangely only the men spoke the Carib
language; women spoke Arawak, the language of Arawak American
Indians, who also lived in the same region.
The term Cannibalism is also derived from the Spanish name
(Caribales, or Canibales) for the Caribs.
G. V. JOSHI
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