The Arawan language family of south-western Amazonia was named after the extinct Arawá language, which is only known from a short wordlist collected by William Chandless in 1867. This paper investigates what Chandless’s list tells us about the position of Arawá within the family and what can currently be said about the relationship between the living Arawan languages
Northwestern Amazonia is home to a great degree of linguistic diversity, and the human societies in ...
This paper studies whether being present in communities belonging to a particular river system influ...
Arawakan is the major language family of lowland South America in terms of number of languages and s...
The small Arawá language family (not to be confused with Arawak) is represented by five languages sp...
This paper presents a first approach at the genetic relation between two Arawakan languages, Mawayan...
The Arawak language family is the largest in South America in terms of its geographical spread, from...
The Arawakan languages are an indigenous language family of South America and the Caribbean. It is t...
Apurinã, Piro and Iñapari, members of the Arawak linguistic family, are initially compared on the ba...
The Tariana language belongs to the Arawak\ud language family (see Arawak Languages). It is spoken\u...
This chapter investigates the cultural and linguistic characteristics of the ethno-linguistic groups...
The Chapacuran language family, with three extant members and nine historically attested lects, has ...
This book considers how and why forms and meanings of different languages at different times may res...
ABSTRACT: Tupinambá, a member of branch III of the Tupi- Guarani linguistic family of the Tupi lingu...
The focus of this chapter is the analysis of body-part terms in Tariana, a North Arawak language spo...
This research is a first attempt to survey ideophones in the Amazonian Arawak language Alto Perené (...
Northwestern Amazonia is home to a great degree of linguistic diversity, and the human societies in ...
This paper studies whether being present in communities belonging to a particular river system influ...
Arawakan is the major language family of lowland South America in terms of number of languages and s...
The small Arawá language family (not to be confused with Arawak) is represented by five languages sp...
This paper presents a first approach at the genetic relation between two Arawakan languages, Mawayan...
The Arawak language family is the largest in South America in terms of its geographical spread, from...
The Arawakan languages are an indigenous language family of South America and the Caribbean. It is t...
Apurinã, Piro and Iñapari, members of the Arawak linguistic family, are initially compared on the ba...
The Tariana language belongs to the Arawak\ud language family (see Arawak Languages). It is spoken\u...
This chapter investigates the cultural and linguistic characteristics of the ethno-linguistic groups...
The Chapacuran language family, with three extant members and nine historically attested lects, has ...
This book considers how and why forms and meanings of different languages at different times may res...
ABSTRACT: Tupinambá, a member of branch III of the Tupi- Guarani linguistic family of the Tupi lingu...
The focus of this chapter is the analysis of body-part terms in Tariana, a North Arawak language spo...
This research is a first attempt to survey ideophones in the Amazonian Arawak language Alto Perené (...
Northwestern Amazonia is home to a great degree of linguistic diversity, and the human societies in ...
This paper studies whether being present in communities belonging to a particular river system influ...
Arawakan is the major language family of lowland South America in terms of number of languages and s...