Dominicans
0 sources
Dominicans
Summary
Dominicans is a human population[1]. Dominicans draws 676 Wikipedia views per month (human_population category, ranking #23 of 132).[2]
Key Facts
- Dominicans held citizenship in Dominican Republic[3].
- Dominicans is located in Dominican Republic[4].
- Dominicans is in the country of Dominican Republic[5].
- Dominicans's image is recorded as Juan pablo duarte diez.jpg[6].
- Dominicans's instance of is recorded as human population[7].
- Dominicans's instance of is recorded as nation[8].
- Dominican Republic is named after Dominicans[9].
- Dominicans's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh85039003[10].
- Dominicans's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 13757610g[11].
- Dominicans's subclass of is recorded as Caribbean people[12].
- Dominicans's subclass of is recorded as Latin Americans[13].
- Dominicans's subclass of is recorded as Americans[14].
- Dominicans's subclass of is recorded as inhabitant[15].
- Dominicans's subclass of is recorded as Hispaniolans[16].
- Dominicans's Commons category is recorded as People of the Dominican Republic[17].
- Dominicans's country of origin is recorded as Dominican Republic[18].
- Dominicans's has part is recorded as Afro Dominicans[19].
- Dominicans's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0808wg5[20].
- Dominicans's NL CR AUT ID is recorded as ph980298[21].
- Dominicans's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Dominican Republic people[22].
- Dominicans's U.S. National Archives Identifier is recorded as 10647191[23].
- Dominicans's partially coincident with is recorded as Quisqueya[24].
- Dominicans's languages spoken, written or signed is recorded as Spanish[25].
- Dominicans's different from is recorded as Dominicans[26].
- Dominicans's different from is recorded as Q85313698[27].
Why It Matters
Dominicans draws 676 Wikipedia views per month (human_population category, ranking #23 of 132).[2] Dominicans has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Dominicans is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]