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Uwa language : ウィキペディア英語版
Uwa language

The Uwa language, ''Uw Cuwa'', commonly known as Tunebo, is a Chibchan language spoken by between 1,800 and 3,600 of the Uwa people of Colombia, out of a total population of about 7,000.〔
==Varieties==
There are half a dozen known varieties. Communication between modern varieties can be difficult, so they are considered distinct languages.
Adelaar (2004) lists the living
*central dialects Cobaría and Tegría on the northern slopes of the Sierra Nevada del Cocuy,
*a western group near Agua Blanca in the departments of Santander and Norte de Santander,
*an eastern group at a place called ''Barro Negro'' in the lowlands of Arauca and Casanare,
*and the extinct dialect Sínsiga near Chita, Boyacá.
Umaña (2012) lists Cobaría, Tegría, Agua Blanca, Barro Negro.
Berich lists the dialects Cobaría; Agua Blanca (= Uncasía, Tamarana, Sta Marta); Rinconada, Tegría, Bócota, & Báchira
Cassani lists Sínsiga, Tegría, Unkasía (= Margua), Pedraza, Manare, Dobokubí (= Motilón)
Osborn (1989) lists
*Bethuwa (= Pedraza, extinct),
*Rikuwa (Dukarúa, = Agua Blanca),
*Tagrinuwa (Tegría),
*Kubaruwa (Cobaría),
*Kaibaká (= Bókota),
*Yithkaya (= San Miguel / Barro Negro),
*Bahiyakuwa (= Sínsiga),
*Biribirá,
*and Ruba,
the latter all extinct
Fabre (2005) lists:
*Bontoca (perhaps the same as the Bókota = Kaibaká cited in Osborn), of the mountains of Guican
*Cobaría, along the Cobaría River
*Pedraza or Bethuwa (Angosturas? ), along the Venezuelan border; extinct
*Sínsiga, in the Guican mountains, recorded from Chita, Boyaca in 1871
*Tegría or Tagrinuwa, along the Cobaría River
*Unkasia, along the Chitiga and Marga rivers (Telban 1988)
Additional names in Loukotka are Manare and Uncasica (presumably a spelling variant of Unkasía/Uncacía), as well as Morcote, of which nothing is known. Manare, at the source of the Casanare, is Eastern Tunebo.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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