The tainos and the Caribs are some but I don't think there's any left.
The Caribbean in actuallity is a group of islands and mainland territories.
a group of islands that are larger than other caribbean islands
Carib, Island Carib, or Kalinago people,(after whom the Caribbean was named), are a group of people who live in the Lesser Antilles islands in the Caribbean.
The Leeward Islands
The term "Caribbean islands" is used to refer to the group of islands located in the Caribbean Sea, which is a region in the western part of the Atlantic Ocean. The islands in this region have a shared cultural and historical background, leading to their collective identification as the Caribbean islands.
The Caribbean islands make up a large group of islands called the Caribbean archipelago. This archipelago consists of over 7000 islands, of which about 13 are independent countries.
No, the Caribbean is descriptive of a diverse group of islands in the Caribbean Sea.
The Caribbean islands derived their name from the Carib people, an indigenous group that inhabited parts of the region at the time of European exploration in the late 15th century. Christopher Columbus and other explorers referred to the islands collectively as "Caribbean" after encountering the Caribs during their voyages. The term has since come to represent the entire group of islands in the Caribbean Sea.
The Bahamas in the Caribbean region are composed of a group of islands known as Abaco. The Abaco is the outlying islands of the Bahamas.
The Arawak people were the most widely spread native group in the Caribbean. They were found in Cuba, Jamaica, Hispaniola, and Puerto Rico.
a group of islands that are larger than other caribbean islands
Cayman Islands