Chamicuro
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Chamicuro | ||
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Spoken in: | Perú | |
Total speakers: | 2 (2000, Adelaar) | |
Language family: | American Arawakan Maipurean Western Maipuran Chamicuro |
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Language codes | ||
ISO 639-1: | none | |
ISO 639-2: | ccc | |
ISO 639-3: | ccc | |
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. |
Chamicuro is a critically endangered indigenous American language spoken by just a pair of aboriginal people in South America. The language is of the Chamicuro people who number between 10 and 20. The Chamicuros live on a tributary of the Huallaga river, in Perú, in an area called Pampa Hermosa, meaning beautiful plains. As with all native languages in Perú, Chamicuro is by default an official language in the area in which it is spoken. A Chamicuro dictionary has been created, however no children can speak the language as they have shifted to Spanish. There is controversy in regard to whether Aguano is the same language, which one study (Ruhlen 1987) says it is, but the Chamicuros dispute this (Wise, 1987), although this may be for cultural reasons and the languages may actually be intelligible but the different peoples do not relate to one another and maintain different names and connotations between their language or languages.