Quechua also called Runasimi ("people's language") in Southern Quechua, is an indigenous language family that originated in central Peru and thereafter ...
People also ask
What language is closest to Quechua?
As you will also have realised, the Quechua language family is closely bound up with the Aymara language family too, so we recommend you also to read our page on the Origins and Diversity of Aymara.
Who speaks Quechua today?
Quechua is most commonly spoken in the southern and central highland areas of Peru. Around 13% of Peruvians speak Quechua as their mother tongue. The Inca legacy means the area around Cusco still has the highest number of Quechua speakers, with 46% of people speaking the language.
Why is Quechua a dying language?
Economic modernization, the development of better communication channels and rapid migratory movements to the coast and urban areas during the republican period (beginning in 1824), not only contributed to the gradual subordination of Quechua to Spanish but, even worse, to the displacement of some varieties and the ...
Is Quechua a Native American language?
Quechua, South American Indians living in the Andean highlands from Ecuador to Bolivia. They speak many regional varieties of Quechua, which was the language of the Inca empire (though it predates the Inca) and which later became the lingua franca of the Spanish and Indians throughout the Andes.
Southern Quechua, the most widely spoken Quechua language, with about 6.9 million speakers ; North Bolivian Quechua, a dialect of Southern Quechua spoken in ...
Quechua, sometimes written Quichua or Ketchua, is a language spoken by 8 million people in the South American nations of Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, ...
Kichwa is a Quechuan language that includes all Quechua varieties of Ecuador and Colombia (Inga), as well as extensions into Peru.
Besides Guaraní it is the only indigenous language of America with more than 5 million speakers. The term Southern Quechua refers to the Quechuan varieties ...
Cuzco Quechua (Quechua: Qusqu qhichwa simi) is a dialect of Southern Quechua spoken in Cuzco and the Cuzco Region of Peru.
the variety of Quechua that was used as a lingua franca and administrative language in the Inca Empire (1438–1533) (henceforward Inca lingua franca). Since the ...
Quechua people or Quichua people may refer to any of the indigenous peoples of South America who speak the Quechua languages, which originated among the ...
The Quechua alphabet (Quechua: Achahala) is based on the Latin alphabet. It is used to write the Quechuan languages. The Quechua alphabet has been use in ...
Quechumaran or Kechumaran is a language-family proposal that unites Quechua and Aymara. Quechuan languages, especially those of the south, share a large ...