Overview
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Endangered

Native Speakers Worldwide

410

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

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Transmission

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Community Members

    No members

Revitalization Programs

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Discussion Forum

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Language Information By Source

Waurá e Mehináku: um breve estudo comparativo
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Endangered

Native Speakers Worldwide

410

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

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Young adult speakers

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Older adult speakers

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Elder Speakers

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Ethnic Population

410

Non-monolingual speakers

No data

More about speakers

Os Waurá, com um total de, aproximadamente, 410 pessoas (ISA, 2006). Como no caso dos Mehináku, os Waurá também são falantes ativos de língua materna, sendo o meio de comunicação diária entre todos os segmentos geracionais dessa etnia. (p.197) [The Waura, with a total of approximately 410 persons (ISA, 2006). As in the case of Mehinaku the Waura are also active native speakers, and the means of daily communication among all generational segments of this ethnic group.]

Year of info

2012

Location and Context

Countries

Brazil

Coordinates

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Location description

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Government support

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Institutional support

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Speakers’s attitudes

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Standard orthography

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Script (Writing system)

No data

Other writing systems

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More on writing systems

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Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Endangered

Native Speakers Worldwide

321

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

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Older adult speakers

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Elder Speakers

No data

Ethnic Population

No data

Non-monolingual speakers

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More about speakers

No data

Year of info

2010

Location and Context

Countries

No data

Coordinates

-12.2554,-53.5899

Location description

No data

Government support

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Institutional support

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Speakers’s attitudes

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Standard orthography

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Script (Writing system)

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Other writing systems

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Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Endangered

Native Speakers Worldwide

330

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

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Older adult speakers

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Elder Speakers

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Ethnic Population

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Non-monolingual speakers

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More about speakers

Speaker number data: (2001 ISA) 320 (Moore 2006); ethnic population: 320 (Moore 2006) (2016).

Year of info

2009

Location and Context

Countries

Brazil

Coordinates

No data

Location description

No data

Government support

No data

Institutional support

No data

Speakers’s attitudes

No data

Standard orthography

No data

Script (Writing system)

No data

Other writing systems

No data

More on writing systems

No data

Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Endangered

Native Speakers Worldwide

321

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

No data

Older adult speakers

No data

Elder Speakers

No data

Ethnic Population

321

Non-monolingual speakers

No data

More about speakers

No data

Year of info

2012

Location and Context

Countries

Brazil

Coordinates

No data

Location description

No data

Government support

No data

Institutional support

No data

Speakers’s attitudes

No data

Standard orthography

No data

Script (Writing system)

No data

Other writing systems

No data

More on writing systems

No data

Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Endangered

Native Speakers Worldwide

~321

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

No data

Older adult speakers

No data

Elder Speakers

No data

Ethnic Population

321

Non-monolingual speakers

No data

More about speakers

They seem to have come from the northwest and were the first settlers in the Xingu area. All Waurá still speak their mother tongue, which is closely related to Mehinako.

Year of info

2007

Location and Context

Countries

Brazil, Mato Grosso state, Xingu

Coordinates

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Location description

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Government support

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Script (Writing system)

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Other writing systems

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More on writing systems

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Other languages used

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Domains of other languages

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More on context

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No data

Native Speakers Worldwide

No data

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

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Transmission

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Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

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Child speakers

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Young adult speakers

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Older adult speakers

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Elder Speakers

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Ethnic Population

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Non-monolingual speakers

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More about speakers

No data

Year of info

2005

Location and Context

Countries

No data

Coordinates

-13.0,-53.0

Location description

No data

Government support

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Speakers’s attitudes

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Standard orthography

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Script (Writing system)

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Other writing systems

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Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Endangered

Native Speakers Worldwide

240

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

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Young adult speakers

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Older adult speakers

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Elder Speakers

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Ethnic Population

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Non-monolingual speakers

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More about speakers

No data

Year of info

Location and Context

Countries

No data

Coordinates

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Location description

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Government support

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Institutional support

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Speakers’s attitudes

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Standard orthography

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Script (Writing system)

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Other writing systems

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Other languages used

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Domains of other languages

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Media Resources

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  1. Endangered Languages Catalogue Project. Compiled by research teams at University of Hawai'i Mānoa and Institute for Language Information and Technology (LINGUIST List) at Eastern Michigan University
    2012. "Endangered Languages Catalogue Project. Compiled By Research Teams At University of Hawai'i Mānoa and Institute For Language Information and Technology (LINGUIST List) At Eastern Michigan University."
  2. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)
    Lewis, M. Paul (ed.). 2009. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16 edn. http://www.ethnologue.com/home.asp. (15 February, 2011.)
    http://www.ethnologue.com/
  3. Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger
    Moseley, Christopher (ed.). 2010. Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger, 3rd edn. http://www.unesco.org/culture/en/endangeredlanguages/atlas. (03 June, 2011.)
    http://www.unesco.org/culture/en/endangeredlanguages/atlas
  4. World Oral Literature Project
    "World Oral Literature Project." Online: http://www.oralliterature.org.
    http://www.oralliterature.org
  5. South America
    Crevels, Mily. 2007. "South America." In Atlas of the World's Endangered Languages, edited by C. Moseley. 103-196. London & New York: Routledge.
  6. Language endangerment in South America: The clock is ticking
    Crevels, Mily. 2012. "Language Endangerment in South America: The Clock Is Ticking." In The Indigenous Languages of South America: A Comprehensive Guide, edited by Hans Henrich Hock et al.. 167-234. Mouton de Gruyter.
  7. The World Atlas of Language Structures
    2005. "The World Atlas of Language Structures." edited by Bernard Comrie et al. Oxford University Press.
  8. Schultz, Harald and Vilma Chiara. 1971. .In Verhandlungen des XXXVIII Internationalen Amerikanistenkongresses, Stuttgart-München, 1968, III: 285-308.
  9. As línguas Waurá e Mehinakú do Brasil Central
    Corbera Mori, Angel. 2005. "As Línguas Waurá E Mehinakú Do Brasil Central." In Anais do IV Congresso Internacional da ABRALIN, edited by Ana Suely Arruda Câmara Cabral and Sanderson Castro Soares de Oliveira. 795-804. Associação Brasileira de Lingüística, Universidade de Brasília.
  10. The Tribes of the Upper Xingu River
    Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1948. "The Tribes of the Upper Xingu River." In The Tropical Forest Tribes, edited by Julian H. Steward. 3: 321-348. Smithsonian Institution, Washington: Bureau of American Ethnology.
  11. Valence-changing Affixes in Maipuran Arawakan Languages
    Wise, Mary Ruth. 1990. "Valence-changing Affixes in Maipuran Arawakan Languages." In Amazonian Linguistics. Studies in Lowland South American Languages, edited by Doris Payne. 89-116. University of Texas Press.