Neighborhood

NoMad

Manhattan
In the Census-defined PUMA including Murray Hill, Gramercy & Stuyvesant Town, according to recent Census data, (in descending order) French, Russian, Mandarin, Japanese, and Hindi each have at least 1000 speakers. English, Spanish, and Korean varieties are widely spoken in the area as well.
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Languages with a significant site in this neighborhood, marked by a point on the map:

Korean

한국어
Manhattan's "K-Town", boxed between 32nd and 35th streets around Broadway and 5th Ave, originated in the late 1970s as a home for textile workers and apparel wholesalers seeking cheap rent. Over the decades, the neighborhood has become popular amongst second-generation Koreans and young people more broadly. In the style of Korea's own urban centers, K-town hosts different restaurants, karaoke bars, and shops on different floors of the same building.

Māori

Te Reo Māori
Though no established community of speakers or focal point has been reported, individual Māori speakers from Aotearoa (New Zealand) have called New York City home for extended periods. Māori leaders and cultural figures — recently including songwriter Ataahua Papa and dancer, choreographer, and scholar Jack Gray — periodically visit the city for events at the United Nations, local universities, and arts institutions. In 2012, for example, the "Language Revitalization in the 21st Century", co-hosted by the Endangered Language Alliance at the CUNY Graduate Center, was led by a delegate of prominent Māori speakers and activists.
Additional languages spoken in this neighborhood:
  • Lithuanian
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