View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Guyanese.

Guyanese

Guyanese meaning

A person from Guyana or of Guyanese descent. | Guyanese Creole

Example sentences (20)

In the case, Guyanese activists, Godfrey Whyte and Frederick Collins said, “an oil spill would be devastating for our country and Region as many Guyanese and Caribbean peoples depend on the ocean for their livelihoods.

In the video, Ogunseye insinuated that Afro-Guyanese are being oppressed, and called on the Joint Services, which is predominantly made up of Afro-Guyanese, to use their guns against this perceived oppression.

Since the company said that it has invested US$45 billion here, then it must be gracious enough to share with all Guyanese its reasons for the great resistance to Guyanese getting a few billions more in royalties, profits, and taxes.

The actress, who is currently on a visit to Guyana after migrating roughly two decades ago, has been making quite an impression on the minds of the Guyanese people, with the engagements she is having with a broad cross-section of the Guyanese community.

We must attempt to craft a national Guyanese narrative that is based on the premise that we each have an equal place in this mosaic that forms the Guyanese nation.

Because what I make clear for my fellow Guyanese is that nobody with some sense can be this crummy with budgets that makes such a dummy out of every Guyanese.

So Once again Guyanese are getting a choice, stay silent and accept “lil-wuk” or fight for their rightful share of their wealth and get “big money”, so once again Guyanese, what will it be?

The Act which outlines 40 different service areas that oil and gas companies and their subcontractors must procure from Guyanese and Guyanese-owned companies.

The T&T nation and Guyanese will miss Panday, his decency and his caring attitude for others, and his presence at Guyanese fetes and cricket games.

The way African Guyanese elites have insulted African Guyanese is one of the most shameless mistreatments in ethnic politics anywhere in the world.

These claims provided the cover for the bandits who posed as “African Guyanese Freedom Fighters” to stage a frontal attack on the Guyanese state.

With such actions in a nation where 39 per cent are Indo-Guyanese, 29 per cent are Afro-Guyanese, 21 per cent are Mixed, and 11 per cent are Amerindians, do you expect the majority to endorse your positions?

Yet, this event is unknown to 99.99 % of Guyanese at home and abroad and this event is conspicuously missing in almost all Guyanese history books.

Jagdeo had also banned then Capitol News journalist, Gordon Moseley from State House and the Office of the President because of a report on the then Guyanese leader’s meeting with Guyanese in Antigua.

A few Indo-Guyanese were co-opted into the PNC, but the ruling party was unquestionably the embodiment of the Afro-Guyanese political will.

Cheddi Jagan of the PPP was elected and sworn in as President on October 9, 1992, reversing the monopoly Afro-Guyanese traditionally had over Guyanese politics.

Fourth, it acts as a barrier to the unity of the country in both a physical and spiritual sense: because they are not unified physically, Guyanese seem to find it difficult to think as Guyanese, to act as if they are one nation.

In British Guiana, the Moyne Commission questioned a wide range of people, including trade unionists, Afro-Guyanese professionals, and representatives of the Indo-Guyanese community.

J.B. Lachmansingh, a leading Indo-Guyanese and head of the GIWU, supported Burnham, whereas Jagan retained the loyalty of a number of leading Afro-Guyanese radicals, such as Sydney King.

The commission pointed out the deep division between the country's two largest ethnic groups, the Afro-Guyanese and the Indo-Guyanese.