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Yapese is an Austronesian language in the Oceanic branch spoken on the island of Yap, in the Federated States of Micronesia. It has been difficult to classify the language further, but Yapese may prove to be one of the Admiralty Islands languages . [ 2 ]
The Admiralty Islands languages are a group of some thirty Oceanic languages spoken on the Admiralty Islands. They may include Yapese , which has proven difficult to classify. Languages
Yapese man, c. 1873. Before coming into contact with Europeans, the Yapese people were familiar with surrounding island groups. Yapese sailors traveled to Palau to quarry stones. Carolinian people visited Yap during times of crises. Spanish and German traders colonized Yap in 1885 and started converting the people to Christianity.
This category contains articles with Yapese-language text. The primary purpose of these categories is to facilitate manual or automated checking of text in other languages. This category should only be added with the {} family of templates, never explicitly.
If you can find any textual source to confirm your recollection, just make the change (it isn't that I don't believe you, but it can't hurt to be sure. Also, you never know but it is possible that the currencies take different forms on different islands or that they have changed over the past 50 or 100 years) Slrubenstein
Yapese may refer to: Yap, one of the Caroline islands in Micronesia; Yap State, a state containing the island and surrounding islets; Yapese Empire, an ancient maritime empire located in the western Caroline Islands in the north Pacific region of Micronesia; Yapese people, the native inhabitants of the island; Yapese language, their language
I previously noticed that the word for "thank you" sounds very similar in japanese and portuguese. It is arigato in Japanse, and obrigado in Portuguese (Plese feel free to correct the spelling of these words). I once traveled to India, and I have been told that "thank you" is also the term in the local language used to say thank you.
Thank you for bringing that to my attention. Thanks, I didn't know that. Thanks, I did not know that guideline. Thank you for letting me know. Thanks, I am getting it now. Thanks for telling me, I would have gotten into trouble. Thank you, I never would have thought of that.