Sirionó (Mbia Cheë;[3] also written as Mbya, Siriono) is a Tupian (Tupi–Guarani, Subgroup II) language spoken by about 400 Sirionó people (50 are monolingual) and 120 Yuqui in eastern Bolivia (eastern Beni and northwestern Santa Cruz departments) in the village of Ibiato (Eviato) and along the Río Blanco in farms and ranches.
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Sirionó | |
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Mbia cheë | |
Native to | Bolivia |
Region | Beni Department, Santa Cruz Department (Bolivia) |
Ethnicity | Sirionó people, Yuqui people |
Native speakers | 500 (2004)[1] |
Language family | Tupian
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Official status | |
Official language in | ![]() |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Variously:srq – Sirionóyuq – Yuqui (Yúki)jor – Jorá (Hora)† |
Glottolog | siri1279 Siriono–Jorayuqu1240 Yuqui |
ELP | Sirionó |
Yuki[2] | |
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. |
Sirionó has phonemic contrasts between front, central, and back, close and mid vowels, i.e.
i ĩ | ɨ ɨ̃ | u ũ |
e ẽ | ə ə̃ | o õ |
a ã |
Languages of Bolivia | |||||||||||
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National language | |||||||||||
Indigenous languages |
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Sign languages | |||||||||||
Italics indicate extinct languages still recognized by the Bolivian constitution. |
Tupian languages | |||||||||||||||||||
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Arikem | |||||||||||||||||||
Tupari | |||||||||||||||||||
Mondé |
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Puruborá– Ramarama | |||||||||||||||||||
Yuruna | |||||||||||||||||||
Munduruku | |||||||||||||||||||
Maweti–Guarani |
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Proto-languages |
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Italics indicate extinct languages |
This Tupian languages-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |