
| Notable Guyanese Britons: Valerie Amos, Leona Lewis, Randy Turpin |
| Total population |
|
Guyanese Britons |
| Regions with significant populations |
| London, Birmingham, Manchester |
| Languages |
| English (British English, Guyanese Creole), Akawaio, Hindi, Macushi, Wai-Wai, Arawakan, Cariban |
| Religion |
| Hinduism, Pentecostalism, Roman Catholic, Islam, Anglicanism |
| Related ethnic groups |
| Guyanese people, British African-Caribbean community, Caribbean British, Black British, Black African, Multiracial, Indo-Caribbean, Indo-Guyanese, Amerindian |
Guyanese British people are citizens or residents of the United Kingdom whose ethnic origins lie fully or partially in the South American nation of Guyana. At the time of the 2001 British Census there were 20,872 Guyanese-born people in the UK, although 2008 estimates including British born people of Guyanese descent stand at 60,000.[1]
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