Guaicuruan languages

Guaicuruan
Waikurúan
Ethnicity: Guaycuru peoples
Geographic
distribution:
northern Argentina, western Paraguay, southern Brazil
Linguistic classification: Mataco–Guaicuru ?
  • Guaicuruan
Subdivisions:
Southern
Eastern

Guaicuruan (also Guaykuruan, Waikurúan, Guaycuruano, Guaikurú, Guaicurú, Guaycuruana) is a language family spoken in northern Argentina, western Paraguay, and Brazil (Mato Grosso do Sul).

Contents

Family division

Guaicuruan/Waikurúan languages are often classified as follows:

Abipón, Guachí, and Payaguá all are extinct.

Harriet Klein argues against the assumption that Kadiweu is Guaicuruan. Most others accept the inclusion of Kadiweu into the family.

Genetic relations

Jorge Suárez includes Guaicuruan with Charruan in a hypothetical Waikuru-Charrúa stock.

Morris Swadesh includes Guaicuruan along with Matacoan, Charruan, and Mascoyan within his Macro-Mapuche stock.

Joseph Greenberg places Guaicuruan within a Mataco–Guaicuru grouping similar to Swadesh's Macro-Mapuche with the exception that his Mataco–Guaicuru also includes Lule–Vilela. Mataco–Guaicuru is then connected with Panoan, Tacanan, and Mosetenan in his larger Macro-Panoan phylum.

Kaufman (1990) suggests that the Guaicuruan–Matacoan–Charruan–Mascoyan–Lule–Vilela proposal deserves to be explored – a grouping which he calls Macro-Waikurúan. Kaufman's (1994) Macro-Waikurúan proposal excludes Lule–Vilela.

Bibliography

External links