Huaorani language

Sabela
Huaorani / Waorani, Wao Terero
Spoken in Ecuador, Peru
Region Oriente or Ecuadorian Amazon
Ethnicity Huaorani people
Native speakers 1,600–2,000  (date missing)
Language family
Official status
Official language in Ecuador: indigenous languages official in own territories
Regulated by No official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-3 auc

The Huaorani (Waorani) language, commonly known as Sabela (also Wao, Huao, Auishiri, Aushiri, Ssabela ; autonym: Wao Terero; pejorative: Auka, Auca) is a language isolate spoken by the Huaorani people, an indigenous group living in the Amazon Rainforest between the Napo and Curaray Rivers. A small number of speakers with so-called uncontacted groups may live in Peru.

Contents

Phonology

Syllable structure is V and CV, with frequent vowel clusters.

p t k
b d~ɾ ɟ~j ɡ
m n ɲ ŋ
w
i
e ɵ~o~ɣ
æ a
ĩ
ɵ̃~õ~ɣ̃
æ̃ ã

Regional variation

Huaorani has 3 varieties:

  1. Tiguacuna (also known as Tiwakuna)
  2. Tuei (also known as Tiwi Tuei, Tiwi)
  3. Shiripuno

Genetic relations

Various hypothetical groupings have included Huaorani:

See also

External links

Bibliography