Chamorro people are the indigenous people of the Mariana Islands, politically divided between the United States territory of Guam and the encompassing Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in Micronesia.
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Chamorro people are the indigenous people of the Mariana Islands, politically divided between the United States territory of Guam and the encompassing Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in Micronesia.
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Some people theorize that Spanish definitions of the word Chamorro played a role in its being used to refer to the island's indigenous inhabitants.
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Chamorro people language is included in the Malayo-Polynesian subgroup of the Austronesian family.
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Chamorro people is often spoken in many homes, but this is becoming less common.
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Spanish colonial records show that Chamorro people farmers planted seeds according to the phases of the Moon.
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Chamorro people society was divided into two main castes, and continued to be so for well over a century after the Spanish first arrived.
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Le Gobien theorized that Chamorro society comprised the geographical convergence of peoples of different ethnic origins.
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Chamorro people culture has over the years acquired noticeable influences from Spanish, Mexican, American, Japanese and Filipino cultures, as well as the presence of fellow Oceanic groups.
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Diabetes and heart disease have become increasingly common among the indigenous population as well as among non-indigenous Oceanic Chamorro people living in the Marianas, particularly the Carolinian Refaluwasch.
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