Yuracaré | |
---|---|
Native to | Bolivia |
Region | Cochabamba Department |
Ethnicity | 3,300 Yuracaré people (2004) 3,394 Yuracaré people (2012) (INE Census) |
Native speakers
|
2,700 (2004) |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
|
Glottolog | yura1255 |
Yuracaré (also Yurakaré, Yurakar, Yuracare, Yurucare, Yuracar, Yurakare, Yurujuré, Yurujare) is an endangered language isolate of central Bolivia in Cochabamba and Beni departments spoken by the Yuracaré people.
There are approximately 2,500 speakers. These numbers are in decline as the youngest generation no longer learns the language. (See Language death.)
Yuracaré is documented with a grammar based on an old missionary manuscript by de la Cueva (Adam 1893). The language is currently being studied by Rik van Gijn. A Foundation for Endangered Languages grant was awarded for a Yuracaré–Spanish / Spanish–Yuracaré dictionary project in 2005.
Suárez (1977) suggests a relationship between Yuracaré and the Mosetenan, Pano–Tacanan, Arawakan, and Chon families. His earlier Macro-Panoan proposal is the same minus Arawakan (Suárez 1969).