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'''Horn Africans in the United States''', '''Horner Americans''' or ''Americans from the Horn of Africa''[{{cite book |last1=Chait |first1=Sandra |title=Seeking Salaam: Ethiopians, Eritreans, and Somalis in the Pacific Northwest |date=2011 |page=27 |quote=Horn africans whom I interviewed in Seattle and Portland and whose thoughtful and sometimes provocative words provide glimpses into the little-understood entanglements of these three communities ... United States, the Horn Africans' experiences are relatively recent, and little scholarship on their U.S. acculturation through story exists ... }}][{{cite book |last1=Akelew |first1=H |title=Morpheme based Bi-directional machine translation the case of ge'ez to Tigrigna |date=2023 |page=3 |quote= implies conversion to Islam among Horn Africans ... large immigrant communities around the world, in countries including ... Canada and the United States}}][{{cite book |last1=Lohrentz |first1=KP |title=Peoples of The Horn in the New African Diaspora: Eritrean, Ethiopian, Somali, and Sudanese Émigrés in the United States and Canada, A Bibliographic Survey |date=2004 |page=9 |quote=Ethiopian Americans, it should be borne in mind that this is the largest and best-established émigré population from the African Horn, particularly in the greater Washington, D.C. area}}][{{cite book |last1=Woldeab |first1=D |title=The relationships between internet usage and acculturation of the Horn of Africa immigrants in the United States |date=2013 |chapter=third & fourth |quote=Horn of Africa immigrants attending English language classes in adult education programs in the upper Midwestern part of the US}}] are [[Americans]] with ancestry from the [[Horn of Africa]]. They include: |