| 释义 | 
		Definition of Arawakan in English: Arawakanadjectiveˌarəˈwak(ə)nˌerəˈwäkən 1Relating to the Arawak people. Example sentencesExamples -  Other Arawakan peoples on the South American mainland were also matrilineal, from Surinam to eastern Peru.
 -  Far from being congealed in time, Arawakan sacred landscapes are cultural processes and, as such, are continually under construction.
 -  Columbus had called the Northern Islanders, Taíno, from the Arawakan word for ‘friendly people’ as contrasted by the hostile Carib.
 -  Many Arawakan languages are now extinct, but a few survive in the former heartland region of the Amazon-Orinoco.
 -  Many communities still speak Arawakan languages in Brazil, and other Arawakan speakers are found in areas such as Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, French Guiana, and Suriname.
 
 2Denoting or belonging to a widely scattered family of languages spoken by the Arawak, most of which are now extinct or nearly so. 阿拉瓦克语的(属南美印第安诸语组成的一个分布广而零散的语系,其中多数语言业已消亡或几近消亡) Example sentencesExamples -  The group is in the Arawakan linguistic family.
 -  This Karinya influence comes as a result of interaction between original speakers of an Arawakan language living in the Lesser Antilles and incoming Karina from South America.
 -  Fanning out from Hispaniola (modern-day Haiti/Dominican Republic), Spaniards enslaved Arawakan and Taino-speaking ‘Indians ‘for mining and agricultural enterprises.’
 
 
 nounˌarəˈwak(ə)nˌerəˈwäkən mass nounThe Arawakan family of languages. 阿拉瓦克语 Example sentencesExamples -  The Tupí-Guaraní family of languages is next to the Arawakan in geographical extent.
 -  Rouse suggests that Arawakan and Cariban are more useful designations for these linguistic stocks.
 -  Prior to the arrival of the Portuguese, the native population spoke languages belonging to at least four major language families: Arawakan, Gê, Carib, and Tupi-Guarani.
 
    Definition of Arawakan in US English: Arawakanadjectiveˌerəˈwäkən 1Relating to the Arawak people. Example sentencesExamples -  Many communities still speak Arawakan languages in Brazil, and other Arawakan speakers are found in areas such as Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, French Guiana, and Suriname.
 -  Columbus had called the Northern Islanders, Taíno, from the Arawakan word for ‘friendly people’ as contrasted by the hostile Carib.
 -  Many Arawakan languages are now extinct, but a few survive in the former heartland region of the Amazon-Orinoco.
 -  Far from being congealed in time, Arawakan sacred landscapes are cultural processes and, as such, are continually under construction.
 -  Other Arawakan peoples on the South American mainland were also matrilineal, from Surinam to eastern Peru.
 
 2Denoting or belonging to a widely scattered family of languages spoken by the Arawak, most of which are now extinct or nearly so. 阿拉瓦克语的(属南美印第安诸语组成的一个分布广而零散的语系,其中多数语言业已消亡或几近消亡) Example sentencesExamples -  Fanning out from Hispaniola (modern-day Haiti/Dominican Republic), Spaniards enslaved Arawakan and Taino-speaking ‘Indians ‘for mining and agricultural enterprises.’
 -  This Karinya influence comes as a result of interaction between original speakers of an Arawakan language living in the Lesser Antilles and incoming Karina from South America.
 -  The group is in the Arawakan linguistic family.
 
 
 nounˌerəˈwäkən The Arawakan family of languages. 阿拉瓦克语 Example sentencesExamples -  The Tupí-Guaraní family of languages is next to the Arawakan in geographical extent.
 -  Rouse suggests that Arawakan and Cariban are more useful designations for these linguistic stocks.
 -  Prior to the arrival of the Portuguese, the native population spoke languages belonging to at least four major language families: Arawakan, Gê, Carib, and Tupi-Guarani.
 
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