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Taíno

or Tai·no

[ tahy-noh ]

noun

, plural Taí·nos, (especially collectively) Taí·no
  1. a member of an Indigenous Arawakan tribe of the Caribbean: the Taíno once dominated the populations of Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, and the Bahamas, but today the Taíno line survives as part of mixed ethnicity.
  2. the Arawakan language spoken by the early Taíno people.


Taino

/ ˈtaɪnəʊ /

noun

  1. -nos-no a member of an American Indian people of the Greater Antilles and the Bahamas
  2. the language of this people, belonging to the Arawakan family


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Word History and Origins

Origin of Taíno1

First recorded in 1835–40; from Taíno: literally, “the noble, men of the good”

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Example Sentences

He began his evening on the fourth floor of the Taino Towers - near 123rd and Lexington Ave - in what was dubbed the VIP room.

He aimed at the historical attitude, and with some imitation of Taino's method and manner, he achieved it.

This arrangement was called by the Taino Indians, a barbacoa from which we get the English equivalent, barbecue.

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