|
The Charruan languages are an extinct group of languages once spoken in Uruguay and the Argentine province of Entre Ríos. In 2005 a semi-speaker of Chaná language was found.〔''La Nación'', ("Investigan los orígenes de una extraña lengua indígena" ) 2005/July/01〕 Four languages are considered to definitively belong to the Charruan language family: *Balomar *Chaná *Charrúa *Güenoa A number of unattested languages are also presumed to belong to the Charruan family:〔 *Bohane – spoken near Maldonado, Uruguay *Calchine – spoken in Santa Fe Province, Argentina, along the Salado River *Caracañá – spoken along the Caracañá River, Santa Fe *Chaná-Mbegua or Begua – spoken on the Paraná River between Crespo and Victoria *Colastiné – spoken in Santa Fe Province near Colastiné *Corondá – spoken in Coronda, Santa Fe Province *Guaiquiaré – spoken in Entre Ríos on the Arroyo Guaiquiraré *Mocoreta or Macurendá or Mocolete – spoken along the Mocoretá River in Entre Ríos *Pairindi – spoken in Entre Ríos from Corrientes to the Feliciano River *Timbu – spoken in Gaboto, Santa Fe Province *Yaro – spoken in Uruguay between the Río Negro and the San Salvador River ==Vocabulary Comparison== The Charruan languages are poorly attested. However, sufficient vocabulary has been gathered for the languages to be compared:〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Charruan languages」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|