Uru of Chʼimu

Extinct Uru language of Peru From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Uru of Chʼimu is an extinct dialect of Uru or distinct Uru–Chipaya language once spoken by the Uros, an Amerindian people, who live on reed islands in Puno Bay in western Lake Titicaca in Peru.

NativetoPeru
RegionLake Titicaca, east of Puno
EthnicityUru people
Extinctafter 1929
Quick facts Native to, Region ...
Uru of Chʼimu
Native toPeru
RegionLake Titicaca, east of Puno
EthnicityUru people
Extinctafter 1929
Uru–Chipaya
  • Uru ?
    • Uru of Chʼimu
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
Glottologtsim1260
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Chʼimu Uru was first identified in 1929 by Lehmann, whose notes, comprising 324 words and some very basic grammatical notes,[1] are in the Library of the Ibero-American Institute in Berlin. Torero (1992) claims that Uru of Chʼimu is the most divergent of the three Uru–Chipaya languages.[citation needed]

References

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