Pasto is a purported Barbacoan language that was spoken by indigenous people of Pasto, Colombia and Carchi Province, Ecuador. It is now extinct.
Pasto | |
---|---|
Native to | Colombia, Ecuador |
Extinct | (date missing) |
Language family | Barbacoan[citation needed]
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Linguist List | bpb (as Pasto) |
Glottolog | past1243 |
Prior to its retirement,[1] the ISO name of the ISO code [bpb]
was Barbacoas, the name of an extinct people who gave their name to the Barbacoan language family of which Pasto is a member, as well as to the Colombian town of Barbacoas. However, nothing is known of their language, one of several also known as Colima (Loukotka 1968: 247),[2] and it can only be assumed to be part of the Barbacoan family (Campbell 2012: 78).[3] Such unattested, long-extinct languages are not normally assigned ISO codes. MultiTree conflates Barbacoas with neighboring Pasto, which is well-enough attested for classification and assignment of an ISO code. This does not however mean that the retired ISO code [bpb]
can be properly used for the Pasto language.
Glottolog distinguishes unclassifiable [past1243]
'Pasto' from unattested [barb1242]
'Barbacoas'.
Barbacoan languages | |
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Northern | |
Southern | |
Cañari–Puruhá ? | |
Italics indicate extinct languages |
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