Highland Ecuadorian Quichua

[également appelé Loja, Calderón [qud], Cañar Highland Quichua [qxr]]

Classification : Quechuan

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vulnérable

Métadonnées relatives aux langues

Loja, Calderón [qud], Cañar Highland Quichua [qxr], Chimborazo [qug], Imbabura Quichua [qvi], Northern Pastaza Quichua [qvz], Salasca [qxl], Tena Quichua [quw], Napo Quichua [qvo], Cotopaxi Quichua.

Quechuan, Quechua IIB

Latin (Spanish-based)

ISO 639-3

qvj, qud; qxr, qug, qvi, qvz, qxj, quw, qvo

En tant que csv

Recherche au sein de la communauté OLAC (Open Language Archives Community)

The question of how to distinguish between entities that are dialects of a single language vs. those that are separate languages is particularly serious in the case of Quechuan languages and dialects, and much work remains to be done. Though it is well-known and very clear that there are a number of distinct languages in the Quechuan complex, some very distinct, the tendency to consider them all merely dialects of “Quechua” persists in many circles. (Cerrón-Palomino 1987.)

Ethnologue (2017) lists a number of separate "languages" where others consider them to be dialects of a single language: Loja [qvj]; Calderón; Cañar Highland Quichua [qxr]; Chimborazo [qug]; Imbabura Quichua [qvi]; Northern Pastaza Quichua [qvz]; Southern Pastaza Quichua [qup]; Salasca [qxl]; Tena Quichua [quw]; Napo Quichua [qvo].

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