Guaicuruan (Kadiwéu) and Southern Guaicuruan according to Nikulin (2019). Guaicuruan/Waikurúan languages are often classified as follows: Guaicuruan Northern...
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proposed language family consisting of the Mataguayan and Guaicuruan languages. Pedro Viegas Barros claims to have demonstrated it. These languages are spoken...
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indigenous to the Gran Chaco region of South America, speaking related Guaicuruan languages. In the 16th century, the time of first contact with Spanish explorers...
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Ergative–absolutive alignment (redirect from Ergative-absolutive languages)
Chibchan languages Chinookan languages (extinct) Coosan languages (extinct) Eskimo–Aleut languages Guaicuruan languages Macro-Jê languages Mayan Mixe–Zoque...
47 KB (4,505 words) - 15:07, 3 September 2024
includes Charruan with Guaicuruan in a hypothetical Waikuru-Charrúa stock. Morris Swadesh includes Charruan along with Guaicuruan, Matacoan, and Mascoyan...
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extinct language of Paraguay, Argentina, and Bolivia, spoken by the Payaguá Indians. It is usually classified as one of the Guaicuruan languages, but the...
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Toba people (category Guaicuruan languages)
that, along with the Matacoana languages that form the mataco-guaicuruan linguistic family. In the Toba Qom language, the Qom originally referred to...
73 KB (9,542 words) - 22:52, 31 August 2024
Gran Chaco people (section Languages)
six language families: Matacoan languages or Mataco-maká (Wichí languages, Chorote languages, Nivaclé languages and the Maká language) Guaicuruan languages...
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Pilagá is a Guaicuruan language spoken by 4,000 people in the Bermejo and Pilcomayo River valleys, western Formosa Province, in northeastern Argentina...
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(Wachí) is an extinct, apparently Guaicuruan language of Argentina. It is usually classified as one of the Guaicuruan languages, but the data is insufficient...
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Abipón (category CS1 Latin-language sources (la))
people of Argentina's Gran Chaco region, speakers of one of the Guaicuruan languages. They ceased to exist as an independent ethnic group in the early...
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Northern Guaicuruan loanwords can be found in Terena. There are also many Tupi-Guarani loanwords in Terena and other southern Arawakan languages. /w, ʃ...
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Toba Qom is a Guaicuruan language spoken in South America by the Toba people. The language is known by a variety of names including Toba, Qom or Kom, Chaco...
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The Mocoví language is a Guaicuruan language of Argentina spoken by about 3,000 people, mostly in Santa Fe, Chaco, and Formosa provinces. In 2010, the...
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|_____ Chané |____ Charruan (?) | |_____ Güenoa | |_____ Chaná (?) |____ Guaicuruan family | |_____ Abipón | |_____ Mbayá | |_____ Payaguá | |_____ Mbeguá...
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Kom (redirect from Kom language)
Paraguay Kom language (Cameroon), a Bantoid language Kom language (India), a Sino-Tibetan language Kom language (South America), a Guaicuruan language Komi language...
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obtained a doctorate in philosophy at Würzburg with a thesis on the Guaicuruan languages. From 1903–1905, Koch explored the Yapura River and the Rio Negro...
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diffusion among Jê, Tupian, Cariban, Arawakan, and Trumai languages is also evident among the languages of the Xingu Indigenous Park. Comparison of Proto-Macro-Jê...
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Kadiwéu is a Guaicuruan language spoken by the Kadiweu people of Brazil, and historically by other Mbayá groups. It has around 1,200-1,800 people in Brazil...
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parallels between Bororo and the Guaicuruan languages. Kaufman (1994) has suggested a relationship with the Chiquitano language, which Nikulin (2020) considers...
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the main language families of the world The language families of Africa Map of the Austronesian languages Map of major Dravidian languages Distribution...
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Lorenzo Hervás (category Linguists of indigenous languages of South America)
Abipón, and Mocobí (Guaicuruan languages) Lule and Vilela (Lule-Vilelan languages) Maipure and Moxa [Moxo] (Arawakan languages) Campbell, Lyle (2012)...
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The Abipón language was a native American language of the Guaicuruan group of the Guaycurú-Charruan family that was at one time spoken in Argentina by...
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also has numerous minority languages, including indigenous languages, such as Nheengatu (a descendant of Tupi), and languages of more recent European and...
117 KB (9,122 words) - 13:50, 15 October 2024
The Indigenous languages of the Americas are a diverse group of languages that originated in the Americas prior to colonization, many of which continue...
104 KB (6,604 words) - 18:58, 4 October 2024
Chaco linguistic area (redirect from Chaco languages)
Grondona (2012) list the following languages as part of the Chaco linguistic area. Mataco–Guaicuru Matacoan Guaicuruan Mascoyan Zamucoan Lule–Vilelan some...
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language, a Mascoian language, one of several languages of the Paraguayan Chaco called Toba Toba Qom language, a Guaicuruan language spoken in Argentina...
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Guaycura language, an extinct language of Mexico Guaycuru peoples, a group of people of South America Guaicuruan languages, or Waikurúan, a language family...
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About 600 indigenous languages are known from South America, Central America, and the Antilles (see List of indigenous languages of South America), although...
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