Yurumanguí language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yurumanguí is an extinct language of Colombia. It is known to us only through a short list of words and phrases recorded by Father Christoval Romero and given by him to Captain Sebastián Lanchas de Estrada, who included them in the report of his travels of 1768. Thereafter the language and its speakers disappear from the historical record.

Father Romero's wordlist was discovered in the archives and published, with analysis and commentary, by Rivet (1942), who argued that the language was a member of the Hokan language family. This claim has not been generally accepted. A critique is given by Poser (1992). Loukotka (1968) included it in Chibchan. The language is generally considered unclassifiable due to the paucity of data.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Loukotka, Čestmír (1968) Classification of South American Indian Languages. University of California, Los Angeles.
  • Poser, William J. (1992) The Salinan and Yurumanguí Data in Language in the Americas. International Journal of American Linguistics 58.2.202-22.[PDF]
  • Rivet, Paul (1942) Un dialecte Hoka Colombien: le Yurumangí. Journal de la Société des Américanistes de Paris 34.1-59.
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