Chamorro is the indigenous language of Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands — both US territories — spoken by around 60,000 people. It's an Austronesian language with significant Spanish vocabulary inherited from three centuries of Spanish colonial rule. As an indigenous US-territory language, Chamorro has co-official status alongside English. Our Chamorro translation work is small but steady: Guam and Mariana Islands civil documents being processed elsewhere in the US, plus cultural and educational translation tied to Chamorro language preservation efforts.