Quichua - significado y definición. Qué es Quichua
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Qué (quién) es Quichua - definición

LANGUAGE FAMILY SPOKEN PRIMARILY IN THE ANDES REGION OF SOUTH AMERICA
Incan language; Runa Simi; Quechuan language; Kechua language; Kechua; Runasimi; Runashimi; Quechoa; Qhichwa; Qichwa; Qheswa; ISO 639:que; Quechuan; Quechua A; Quechua II; Runa-Simi language; Ketchwa; Northern Quechua; Quechua language; Quechuan (family); Quechua Language; ISO 639:qu; Quechua II languages; Quechua I languages; Quechua II-B; Quechua dialects; Quechua B language; Quechua A language; ISO 639:qwe; Yungay Quechua; Quechua II-A; Yunkay Quechua; Quechua languages; Quechua grammar; Inca language; Language of the Inca; Language of the Incas; History of the Quechuan languages; Kechua languages; Quechuan phonology
  • Act of Argentine Independence, written in Spanish and Quechua (1816)
  • Map of Peru showing the distribution of overall Quechua speakers by district
  • Indians]] of Peru, called Quichua (1560). From [[Domingo de Santo Tomás]] the first writer in Quechua.

Quichua      
['k?t?w?]
¦ noun variant of Quechua.
Quijos-Quichua         
  • Handicrafts made by members of the Quijos Nation.
  • Chirimoya - a fruit cultivated by the Quijos in the Amazon.
  • The ayahuasca plant, used by the Quijos.
  • Often in traditional Quijos cuisine, food is wrapped in banana leaves and cooked over the fire.
  • Quijos preparing Barbasco for fishing
  • The leaves of chonta are used for the rituals of the Wankiris Quijos.
  • Statute of the Quijos nation
  • Meals are eaten on larger banana leaves on the ground.
  • Quijos with one of his hunting instrument
  • Maito (usually tilapia) is a traditional Quijos meal made by being wrapped in banana leaf and cooked over the fire.
  • Tilapia Maito - a traditional Quijos meal.
AMAZONIAN ETHNIC GROUP
Napo-Quichua; Napo Runa; Napo Kichua; Quijos Indians; Quijos
The Quijos-Quichua (Napo-Quichua) are a Lowland Quechua (Runa Shimi) people, living in the basins of the Napo, Aguarico, San Miguel, and Putumayo river basins of Ecuador and Peru. In Ecuador they inhabit in the Napo Alto as well as the rivers Ansuy and Jatun Yacu, where they are also known as Quijos Quechua.
Santiagueño Quechua         
DIALECT OF SOUTHERN QUECHUA SPOKEN IN ARGENTINA
Santiago del estero quichua; Quichua Santiagueno language; Santiago del Estero Quichua language; ISO 639:qus; Santiago del Estero Quechua language; Santiago del Estero Quechua; Santiago del Estero Quichua; Santiagueño Quichua; Santiagueno Quechua; Santiagueño Quechua language
Santiago del Estero Quichua or Santiagueño Quechua (Santiagen Quichua) is a vulnerable dialect of Southern Quechua spoken by 60,000-100,000 people (estimates vary widely) in Argentina. It is spoken in the province of Santiago del Estero.

Wikipedia

Quechuan languages

Quechua (, US also ; Spanish: [ˈketʃwa]), usually called Runasimi ("people's language") in Quechuan languages, is an indigenous language family spoken by the Quechua peoples, primarily living in the Peruvian Andes. Derived from a common ancestral language, it is the most widely spoken pre-Columbian language family of the Americas, with an estimated 8–10 million speakers as of 2004. Approximately 25% (7.7 million) of Peruvians speak a Quechuan language.

Quechua was the main language family of the Inca Empire. The Spanish encouraged its use until the Peruvian struggle for independence of the 1780s. As a result, Quechua variants are still widely spoken today, being the co-official language of many regions and the second most spoken language family in Peru.

Ejemplos de uso de Quichua
1. The eruption affected about 30,000 people, many of them poor Quichua–speaking Indians, in three highland provinces, officials said.
2. Civil defense authorities and police continued to evacuate seven small villages around the volcano, whose name means "throat of fire" in the indigenous Quichua language.
3. Ash billowing from Tungurahua, whose name means throat of fire‘‘ in the local indigenous Quichua language, has already covered thousands of acres of farmland, destroying property, crops and livestock.
4. Most of the bilingual Quichua and Spanish–speaking community‘s 1,500 residents earn a meagre living by selling cocoa beans, plantains and corn at nearby towns, and few have ever worked at the oil field.
5. "We never thought Tungurahua would awake like this," Egas said of the volcano, whose name means "throat of fire" in the local Quichua language. (Watch the volcano erupt –– 1:32) Authorities said Saturday that three people had died from the 1'–hour eruption, which ended Thursday before dawn, and that two others were feared killed.