Cavineña
[aka Cavinena, Kavinenya,]Classification: Pano-Tacanan
·endangered
Classification: Pano-Tacanan
·endangered
Cavinena, Kavinenya |
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Pano-Tacanan, Takana |
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ISO 639-3 |
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cav |
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As csv |
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Information from: “Cavineña” (115-154 ch. Cavineña) . Guillaume, Antoine (2012) , Mily Crevels and Pieter Muysken · Plural Editores
In almost 30 traditional communities of 40 to 140 persons, dispersed in an extensive area near the Beni River, specifically the northern part of the José Ballivián province of the department of Beni.
Information from: “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press
Information from: “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
1,736
1,680 (2006 PIB). Ethnic population: 2,950 (2001 DNPI) (2013).
North Bolivia, southeast of Riberalta, along Beni River; east of the Beni; 500 in Pando west of the Beni; in the communities of Baqueti, Bolívar, California, Galilea, Candelaria, Misión Cavinas, Natividad, Paraíso, Peña Guarayo, Santa Catalina, San Juan, San José, San Miguel, Francia, El Choro.
North Bolivia, southeast of Riberalta, along Beni River; east of the Beni; 500 in Pando west of the Beni; in the communities of Baqueti, Bolívar, California, Galilea, Candelaria, Misión Cavinas, Natividad, Paraíso, Peña Guarayo, Santa Catalina, San Juan, San José, San Miguel, Francia, El Choro.
Information from: “Highland South America and the Caribbean” . Willem Adelaar and Gustavo Solis Fonseca (2010) , Christopher Moseley · UNESCO
Information from: “South America” (103-196) . Mily Crevels (2007) , C. Moseley · London & New York: Routledge
In some communities, such as Riberalta, the language isn't being passed on while in others it's strong.
Bolivia, north, departments of Beni and Pando, provinces of Ballivian, Vaca Diez and Madre de Dios, southeast of Riberalta, along the Beni River.