[Extract] The Arawak family is the largest in South America, with about forty extant languages. Arawak languages are spoken in lowland Amazonia and beyond, covering French Guiana, Suriname, Guiana, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Brazil, and Bolivia, and formerly in Paraguay and Argentina. Wayuunaiki (or Guajiro), spoken in the region of the Guajiro peninsula in Venezuela and Colombia, is the largest language of the family. Garifuna is the only Arawak language spoken in Belize, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Guatemala in Central America. Groups of Arawak speakers must have migrated from the Caribbean coast to the Antilles a few hundred years before the European conquest. At least several dozen Arawak languages have become extinct since the European co...
The focus of this chapter is the analysis of body-part terms in Tariana, a North Arawak language spo...
[Extract:] Tariana is an endangered North Arawak language spoken in the linguistic area of the Vaup...
Data accompanying the paper "The diversity of Arawakan languages from the upper Rio Negro in recordi...
[Extract] The Arawak family is the largest in South America, with about forty extant languages. Araw...
The Arawak language family contains the largest number of languages in Latin America. Geographicall...
The Arawak language family contains the largest\ud number of languages in Latin America. Geographica...
The Arawakan languages are an indigenous language family of South America and the Caribbean. It is t...
The Arawakan languages are an indigenous language family of South America and the Caribbean. It is t...
The Arawakan languages are an indigenous language family of South America and the Caribbean. It is t...
The Arawak language family is the largest in South America in terms of its geographical spread, from...
The Arawak language family is the largest in South America in terms of its geographical spread, from...
This chapter investigates the cultural and linguistic characteristics of the ethno-linguistic groups...
The degree of linguistic diversity in South America is comparable only to that in New Guinea (see Ch...
The degree of linguistic diversity in South America is comparable only to that in New Guinea (see Ch...
The small Arawá language family (not to be confused with Arawak) is represented by five languages sp...
The focus of this chapter is the analysis of body-part terms in Tariana, a North Arawak language spo...
[Extract:] Tariana is an endangered North Arawak language spoken in the linguistic area of the Vaup...
Data accompanying the paper "The diversity of Arawakan languages from the upper Rio Negro in recordi...
[Extract] The Arawak family is the largest in South America, with about forty extant languages. Araw...
The Arawak language family contains the largest number of languages in Latin America. Geographicall...
The Arawak language family contains the largest\ud number of languages in Latin America. Geographica...
The Arawakan languages are an indigenous language family of South America and the Caribbean. It is t...
The Arawakan languages are an indigenous language family of South America and the Caribbean. It is t...
The Arawakan languages are an indigenous language family of South America and the Caribbean. It is t...
The Arawak language family is the largest in South America in terms of its geographical spread, from...
The Arawak language family is the largest in South America in terms of its geographical spread, from...
This chapter investigates the cultural and linguistic characteristics of the ethno-linguistic groups...
The degree of linguistic diversity in South America is comparable only to that in New Guinea (see Ch...
The degree of linguistic diversity in South America is comparable only to that in New Guinea (see Ch...
The small Arawá language family (not to be confused with Arawak) is represented by five languages sp...
The focus of this chapter is the analysis of body-part terms in Tariana, a North Arawak language spo...
[Extract:] Tariana is an endangered North Arawak language spoken in the linguistic area of the Vaup...
Data accompanying the paper "The diversity of Arawakan languages from the upper Rio Negro in recordi...