View this site in :

 

 

 

 


Australia & The Pacific

American Samoa
Australia
Cook Islands
Fiji
French Polynesia
Guam
Kiribati
Marshall Islands
Micronesia
Nauru
New Caledonia
New Zealand
Niue
Northern Mariana Islands
Palau
Papua New Guinea
Solomon Islands
Tahiti
Tokelau
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu
Wake Island
Wallis and Futuna
Western Samoa

American Samoa
People: Polynesian (89%), Caucasian (2%), Tongan (4%), other (5%)
Languages: Samoan, English

Australia
People: 94% European descent, 4% Asian, 1.5% Aboriginal
Languages: English, Aboriginal languages (plus Italian, Greek and numerous other European and Asian languages)

Cook Islands
People: Polynesian (80%), mixed Polynesian and European (8%)
Language: English (official), Maori

Fiji
People: Indigenous Fijian 50%, Indian 45%
Languages: English is the official language, Fijian dialects are spoken by the indigenous Fijians (Bauan is the most spoken) and the Indian community speak Fiji-Hindi

French Polynesia
People: 83% Polynesians (Maohis), 12% Europeans, 5% Asians
Languages: Tahitian, French and English

Guam
People: 47% Chamorro, 25% Filipino, 10% Caucasian, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and 18% other
Language: English, Chamorro

Kiribati
People: Micronesian
Languages: Micronesian dialect, English

Marshall Islands
People: Micronesian
Languages: English (official), Malayo-Polynesian family, Japanese

Micronesia
Language: Chuuk, Kosraean, Ponapean, Yapese, English

Nauru
People: Melanesian, Polynesian, Pacific Islanders, Asians, Europeans

New Caledonia
People: Melanesian (44.1%), European (31.4%), Pacific Islanders & Indonesians
Language: French, Melanesian-Polynesian dialects

New Zealand
People: 88% European (Pakeha), 12% Maori and Polynesian
Languages: English and Maori

Niue
People: Polynesian (85% Niuean, plus Tongan, Tuvaluan, Samoan), New Zealanders
Language: Niuean Polynesian, English

Northern Mariana Islands
People: Filipino (34%), Chamorro (30%), Chinese (12%), Micronesian (8%), Carolinian (5%)
Language: English (official), Chamorro, Carolinian, Japanese, Korean

Palau
People: Polynesian, Malayan, Melanesian
Languages: English (official), Palauan (official), Sonsoralese, Angavr, Japanese, Tobi

Papua New Guinea
People: 95% Melanesian, 5% Polynesian, Micronesian, Chinese
Language: 750 indigenous languages plus Pidgin and Motu

Solomon Islands

People: Melanesian (95%), Polynesian (4%), Asian and Micronesian (1%)
Languages: Solomon Islands Pijin, English and 67 official indigenous languages

Tahiti
People: 83% Polynesians (Maohis), 12% Europeans, 5% Asians
Languages: Tahitian, French and English

Tokelau
People: Polynesian
Language: Tokelauan, English

Tonga
People: Polynesian

Tuvalu
People: Polynesian (96%), Micronesian (4%)
Languages: Tuvaluan, Samoan, English

Vanuatu
People: Melanesian & Polynesian (94%), French (4%), Chinese, Pacific Islanders and Vietnamese (2%)
Languages: Bislama ('pidgin' English), French, English and more than 100 indigenous languages

Wake Island
Language: English

Wallis and Futuna

People: Polynesian (93%), French (7%)
Languages: Wallisian, Futunan, French

Western Samoa
Language: Samoan, English

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Africa
The Americas
Asia
Australia & The Pacific
Europe
Middle East

 

Copyright 2003 Global Communicators
All Rights Reserved
Home|Site Map|Privacy Policy