Ignaciano [aka Moxo, Mojo, Mojeño] Classification: Arawakan · threatened Description Resources Activity Revitalization Bibliography Suggest a Change Subscribe
Language metadata ALSO KNOWN AS Moxo, Mojo, Mojeño CLASSIFICATION Arawakan, Southern Arawakan, Southern Outlier CODE AUTHORITY ISO 639-3 LANGUAGE CODE ign VARIANTS & DIALECTS Javeriano Loretano Trinitario? Ignaciano? DOWNLOAD As csv MORE RESOURCES OLAC search ADDITIONAL COMMENTS Crevels (2012:174): The distinction between language and dialect is often more socio-political than linguistic, as in the case of Ignaciano and Trinitario. Aikhenvald (1999a: 67) lists Moxo and Ignaciano as alternative names for the same language; Ethnologue lists Mojo as an alternative name for Ignaciano, with Trinitario as a dialect with limited intelligibility, but also lists Trinitario as a separate language with the dialects Loreto [Loretano] and Javierano. Language information by source Compare Sources (3) Information from: “World Oral Literature Project” . Information from: “World Oral Literature Project” . Threatened 20 percent certain, based on the evidence available 4,500 Native speakers worldwide Information from: “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International Threatened 20 percent certain, based on the evidence available 4,500 Native speakers worldwide Ethnic population 20,805 MORE ON SPEAKER NUMBERS 4,500 (2000 SIL). Ethnic population: 20,805 with Trinitario (2000 W. Adelaar). 4,500 (Adelaar 2004). Ethnic population: 20,800 (Adelaar 2004). Includes Trinitario [trn]. (2013 unchanged.) DATE OF INFO 2000 PLACES Bolivia; LOCATION DESCRIPTION South central Beni. Information from: “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press PLACES (General note: provincia de Moxos, departamento del Beni, Bolivia) Discussion Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus. comments powered by Disqus