@prefix ex: .
@prefix xsd: .
ex:abip1241 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:guai1249,
ex:guai1250 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.01366 0.02518 -0.01652 0.01496 0.02756 -0.02726 -0.00855 -0.01570 0.00559 0.02392 ..." ;
ex:iso "axb" ;
ex:label "Abipon" ;
ex:latitude -2.9e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.1e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:apia1247,
ex:mapi1252 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.338e-01,
5.3412e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Argentina" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "0" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Abipón was a native American language of the Guaicuruan group of the Guaycurú-Charruan family that was at one time spoken in Argentina by the Abipón people. Its last speaker is thought to have died in the 19th century. The language is also known as Abipone, Callaga and Apibon." .
ex:akun1241 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:akun1243,
ex:arik1267,
ex:nucl1716,
ex:tupa1251,
ex:tupi1275 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01047 0.01867 -0.00137 0.02636 0.03656 -0.02385 -0.01915 -0.04125 0.02886 -0.00024 ..." ;
ex:iso "aqz" ;
ex:label "Akuntsu" ;
ex:latitude -1.28322e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.09716e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:aman1266,
ex:kano1245 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3642e-01,
5.369e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Akuntsu is a Tupian language of Brazil. Peaceful contact with the Akuntsu people was only made in 1995; they had been massacred by cattle ranchers in the 1980s.
It is considered unlikely that the Akuntsu language or culture will survive following the deaths of the tribe's remaining members. For this reason several observers have described the tribe as the victims of genocide. The neighbouring Kanoê have been similarly reduced in number through contact with settlers, as were the people of a man recently encountered living alone in the Igarapé Omerê reserve who was apparently the sole survivor of his tribe, referred to as the Man of the Hole.""" .
ex:ambo1252 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cent2141,
ex:quec1386,
ex:quec1387,
ex:yaru1256 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00028 0.01398 -0.02180 0.02553 0.02048 -0.01483 -0.01472 -0.01941 0.02655 0.01095 ..." ;
ex:iso "qva" ;
ex:label "Ambo-Pasco Quechua" ;
ex:latitude -1.05138e+01 ;
ex:longitude -7.61135e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:chin1483,
ex:pana1306 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.0888e-01,
5.0926e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" .
ex:anse1238 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:choc1280,
ex:unun9901 ;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01416 0.00919 -0.01327 0.01150 0.01815 -0.02375 -0.01300 -0.03157 0.01882 0.01970 ..." ;
ex:iso "ans" ;
ex:label "Anserma" ;
ex:latitude 6.24999e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.605e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:anta1256,
ex:nucl1663 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.0781e-01,
5.0905e-01 .
ex:anti1242 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:chib1249,
ex:core1252,
ex:unun9943 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00397 0.02328 -0.00949 0.02075 0.02140 -0.02867 -0.02805 -0.02155 0.00758 -0.00055 ..." ;
ex:label "Antioquian" ;
ex:latitude 7.199341e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.534224e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:ando1254,
ex:kank1244 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3295e-01,
5.3438e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Antioquian may refer to any of several extinct and poorly attested or unattested languages of the Santa Fe de Antioquia region of Colombia. The languages were not necessarily related to each other. Languages, dialects, and ethnic names lumped under the term include:
Old Catio (Chibchan)
Nutabe (Nutabane; Chibchan)
Anserma (Anserna, Ancerma; a.k.a. Humbra/Umbra; dialects Caramanta & Cartama. Chocoan.)
Arma-Pozo (dialects Arma, Pozo)
Avurrá (Aburra; 1 word known, possibly Chibchan)
Yamesí (no data)
Guazuzú
Buritaca
Abibe
Pequi
Hevejico
Amachi
Guamoco
Tahami
Oromina (a.k.a. Zeremoe)""" .
ex:apol1242 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:araw1281,
ex:boli1260,
ex:sout3131,
ex:uncl1518 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.01685 0.01145 -0.00582 0.02073 0.03432 -0.04595 -0.00689 -0.03069 0.02594 0.03767 ..." ;
ex:label "Apolista" ;
ex:latitude -1.483e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.866e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:apia1247,
ex:apia1248 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3031e-01,
5.3274e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Lapachu, also known as Apolista or Aguachile,: 315 is an extinct Arawakan language of Bolivia. Aikhenvald (1999) classifies it together with Terena, Moxos, and related languages. It is not clear from surviving descriptions whether it was one language or two." .
ex:arab1268 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:arab1396,
ex:iqui1244,
ex:zapa1251 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00261 0.01384 -0.00530 0.01574 0.02622 -0.04106 -0.00310 -0.02802 0.00471 0.02577 ..." ;
ex:iso "arl" ;
ex:label "Arabela" ;
ex:latitude -1.96126e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.50612e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:iqui1243,
ex:zapa1253 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3188e-01,
5.3289e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua amazónica del Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "50" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Arabela is a nearly extinct indigenous American language of the Zaparoan family spoken in two Peruvian villages in tropical forest along the Napo tributary of the Arabela river.
Also known as Chiripuno and Chiripunu, it is spoken by fewer than 50 people out of an ethnic population of about 400.
Since there are so few speakers of Arabela left, its speakers speak either Spanish or Quechua as a second language. The literacy rate for Arabela as a first language is about 10–30%, and about 50–75% for a second language. It uses a SOV word order.
Like all native languages in Peru, it has an official status in areas where it is spoken.""" .
ex:araz1236 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:madr1238,
ex:main1279,
ex:pano1256,
ex:pano1257,
ex:pano1259 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00535 0.01434 -0.00075 0.01706 0.01618 -0.04456 -0.02178 -0.01195 0.00264 0.02187 ..." ;
ex:label "Arazaire" ;
ex:latitude -1.325e+01 ;
ex:longitude -7.08e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:arua1264,
ex:pisa1245 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3586e-01,
5.3978e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Arazaire and Arasa are a pair of closely related languages of uncertain affiliation, within the Pano-Tacanan languages." .
ex:arge1236 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:deaf1237,
ex:sign1238 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00352 0.04476 -0.01845 0.02228 0.02631 -0.03145 -0.01159 -0.00130 0.01010 0.00463 ..." ;
ex:iso "aed" ;
ex:label "Argentine Sign Language" ;
ex:latitude -3.4797e+01 ;
ex:longitude -5.91798e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:chil1264,
ex:urug1238 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2365e-01,
5.2827e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Argentina" ;
ex:wikidata_description "idioma natural hablado con las manos por sordos y oyentes argentinos" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Argentine Sign Language (Spanish: Lengua de señas argentina, LSA) is used in Argentina. Deaf people attend separate schools, and use local sign languages out of class. A manual alphabet for spelling Spanish has been developed." .
ex:arub1238 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:anti1247,
ex:araw1281,
ex:cari1281,
ex:uncl1528 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.01925 0.02230 -0.00384 0.01955 0.01587 -0.02662 -0.02763 -0.02659 0.02975 0.01324 ..." ;
ex:label "Caquetio" ;
ex:latitude 1.128679e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.965051e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:arai1239,
ex:jira1235 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.322e-01,
5.328e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Caquetío, also called Caquetío Arawak, is an extinct Arawakan language. The language was spoken along the shores of Lake Maracaibo, in the coastal areas of the Venezuelan state of Falcón, and on the Dutch islands of Aruba, Bonaire and Curaçao. It is referred to as a "ghost language" because no tangible evidence of it remains. Only the name still exists, as mentioned in references from 17th-century texts.
The Caquetíos and the Jirajara spoke an Arawak language, and their cultures showed great similarities.""" .
ex:ator1244 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:araw1281,
ex:mapi1253,
ex:negr1239,
ex:wapi1252,
ex:wapi1254 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00428 0.00610 0.00293 0.02035 0.02808 -0.01137 0.00031 -0.02054 0.00894 0.04898 ..." ;
ex:iso "aox" ;
ex:label "Atorada" ;
ex:latitude 2.481e+00 ;
ex:longitude -6.0286e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:arut1244,
ex:mapi1252 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.334e-01,
5.3438e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Guyana" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Atorada or Atoraí is a moribund Arawakan language of Brazil and Guyana. Henri Ramirez (2019) considers it to be a dialect of Wapishana.: 33
""" .
ex:atsa1242 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:madr1238,
ex:main1279,
ex:pano1256,
ex:pano1257,
ex:pano1259 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00052 -0.00020 -0.00232 0.01360 0.02013 -0.01997 -0.00727 -0.03761 0.00801 0.00425 ..." ;
ex:iso "atc" ;
ex:label "Atsahuaca" ;
ex:latitude -1.41666e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.95e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:amah1246,
ex:paya1236 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2868e-01,
5.3469e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "20" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Atswawaka, also called Atsahuaca, or Atsawaka-Yamiaka, is an extinct Panoan language of Peru. Atsahuaca is the name that the tribe calls themselves, meaning "children of the manioc" in their own language. Alternate spellings of the name of the Atswakaka language include: Atsawaka, Atsawaca, Astahuaca, Yamiaca, Yamiaka, Atsawaka-Yamiaka, and Atsahuaca-Yamiaca.
There were 20 speakers in 1904.""" .
ex:awac1239 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:awas1234,
ex:barb1265 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00940 0.01638 -0.00667 0.02682 0.01380 -0.00971 -0.01489 -0.02556 0.02247 0.02163 ..." ;
ex:iso "kwi" ;
ex:label "Awa-Cuaiquer" ;
ex:latitude 1.21652e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.83401e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:apia1248,
ex:cabi1241 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3762e-01,
5.378e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Colombia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "12055" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Awa Pit, otherwise known as Cuaiquer (Coaiquer, Cuayquer, Kwaiker, Kwayquer, etc.), is a Barbacoan language. Awa Pit is classified by UNESCO as a severely endangered language. The Awa Pit language has a subject–object–verb structure and has adopted the Latin script. Grammatically, Awa Pit uses a characteristic conjunct/disjunct system of verb suffixes for person-marking." .
ex:awet1244 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:awet1245,
ex:east2909,
ex:mawe1252,
ex:tupi1275 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00602 -0.00181 -0.01108 0.01505 0.02897 -0.02508 -0.01276 -0.01584 0.02921 0.03131 ..." ;
ex:iso "awe" ;
ex:label "Awetí" ;
ex:latitude -1.238194e+01 ;
ex:longitude -5.339194e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:apia1248,
ex:tapi1254 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.303e-01,
5.3079e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "170" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "The Awetí or Aweti language is one of the Tupian languages of Central Brazil. Spoken by the indigenous people that live along the Upper Xingu River, the language is in danger of becoming extinct with a declining 150 living speakers. The Aweti people live in a multilingual area due to various indigenous people settling there from various regions. In search of refuge many people have relocated to the reserve as a result of European colonialism." .
ex:bari1297 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:chib1249,
ex:core1252,
ex:magd1236,
ex:sout3015 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00164 0.03103 -0.01573 -0.00162 0.02559 -0.01816 -0.01117 -0.04167 0.00365 0.00875 ..." ;
ex:iso "mot" ;
ex:label "Barí" ;
ex:latitude 9.08497e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.29353e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:mati1253,
ex:waim1255 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.337e-01,
5.3428e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Colombia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua indígena del Catatumbo" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Barí is a Chibchan language spoken in Northwestern South America by the Barí (Motilon)." .
ex:baur1253 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:araw1281,
ex:boli1260,
ex:sout3131 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00021 0.01632 -0.00675 0.03183 0.03326 -0.03773 -0.00863 -0.02202 0.01860 0.03015 ..." ;
ex:iso "brg" ;
ex:label "Baure" ;
ex:latitude -1.361e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.368e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:baur1256,
ex:carm1234,
ex:hist1234,
ex:joaq1235,
ex:muxo1234,
ex:paic1240 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:cayu1262,
ex:yura1255 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3264e-01,
5.3421e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Bolivia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua arahuaca del sur, hablada en la región noreste de Bolivia" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Baure or Bauré is an endangered Arawakan language spoken by only 40 of the thousand Baure people of the Beni Department of northwest of Magdalena, Bolivia. Some Bible portions have been translated into Bauré. Most speakers have been shifting to Spanish.
In 2010, the language had around 20 native speakers left, based on the evidence available. Since Supreme Decree N.25894 in 2000, it has been considered one of the official indigenous languages of Bolivia, which was included in the Political Constitution passed on 7 February 2009.""" .
ex:boli1236 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:asli1244,
ex:deaf1237,
ex:lsfi1234,
ex:sign1238,
ex:west2886 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00242 0.02511 -0.01723 0.02799 0.03498 -0.00905 -0.00714 -0.01277 0.03454 0.03395 ..." ;
ex:iso "bvl" ;
ex:label "Bolivian Sign Language" ;
ex:latitude -1.638949e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.757823e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:mach1268,
ex:tapi1253 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.1556e-01,
5.171e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Bolivia" .
ex:bona1255 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cari1283,
ex:yawa1262 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00948 0.00406 -0.00844 0.01928 0.02634 -0.03440 -0.01667 -0.03716 0.00356 0.00599 ..." ;
ex:label "Bonari" ;
ex:latitude -2.047516e+00 ;
ex:longitude -5.846849e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:cari1280,
ex:sapa1254 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2715e-01,
5.285e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Boanarí (Bonari) is an extinct and poorly attested Cariban language. Kaufman (2007) placed it in his Atruahí branch." .
ex:cafu1238 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:braz1247,
ex:clas1257,
ex:gali1263,
ex:impe1234,
ex:indo1319,
ex:ital1284,
ex:ital1285,
ex:lati1262,
ex:lati1263,
ex:macr1272,
ex:roma1334,
ex:shif1234,
ex:sout3183,
ex:west2813,
ex:west2838 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00135 0.02354 0.00160 0.01770 0.02178 -0.02744 -0.01360 -0.01634 0.01190 0.02810 ..." ;
ex:iso "ccd" ;
ex:label "Cafundo" ;
ex:latitude -2.30448e+01 ;
ex:longitude -4.36455e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:kari1317,
ex:pemo1248 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3838e-01,
5.3926e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Cafundó (Portuguese pronunciation: [kafũˈdɔ]), or Cupópia ([kuˈpɔpjɐ]), is an argot ("secret language") spoken in the Brazilian village of Cafundó, São Paulo, now a suburb of Salto de Pirapora. The language is structurally similar to Portuguese, with many Bantu words in its lexicon.
Cafundó was at first thought to be an African language, but a later study (1996) by Carlos Vogt and Peter Fry showed that its grammatical and morphological structure are those of Brazilian Portuguese, specifically the rural hinterland Southeastern variety, caipira. Whereas its lexicon is heavily drawn from some Bantu language(s). It is therefore not a creole language, as it is sometimes considered. In contrast to Vogt and Fry (1996), Álvarez López and Jon-And (2017) suggests that when speakers code-switch from Cafundó Portuguese to Cupópia, they produce something different from a contemporary regional variety of Portuguese with a number of African-derived words. Rather, the passages in which Cupópia is used comprise specific grammatical features, suggesting that the variety has its own grammar.
""" .
ex:caja1239 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:apam1237,
ex:cent2141,
ex:quec1386,
ex:quec1387 ;
ex:describedByResource ;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00298 0.02407 -0.01927 0.02462 0.01771 -0.00756 -0.01882 -0.04493 0.02471 0.02139 ..." ;
ex:iso "qvl" ;
ex:label "Cajatambo North Lima Quechua" ;
ex:latitude -1.04126e+01 ;
ex:longitude -7.69602e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:chin1483,
ex:nort2979 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.0885e-01,
5.0943e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" .
ex:cana1262 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:colo1257,
ex:ecua1249,
ex:quec1387 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00295 0.00713 -0.01560 0.02123 0.01228 -0.00489 -0.02579 -0.02652 0.03378 0.00623 ..." ;
ex:iso "qxr" ;
ex:label "Cañar-Azuay-South Chimborazo Highland Quichua" ;
ex:latitude -2.48314e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.89672e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:azua1234,
ex:cana1270,
ex:sout3334 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:chim1302,
ex:imba1240 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.0873e-01,
5.0952e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Ecuador" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" .
ex:cand1248 a ex:Language ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00924 0.02298 -0.01353 0.01623 0.03338 -0.02016 -0.00264 -0.04130 0.01336 0.00127 ..." ;
ex:iso "cbu" ;
ex:label "Candoshi-Shapra" ;
ex:latitude -4.23835e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.69347e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:chap1270,
ex:chir1297,
ex:huit1253,
ex:kand1305,
ex:mura1278 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:capa1241,
ex:zapa1253 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3367e-01,
5.3403e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "idioma amerindio hablado en el Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "1120" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Candoshi-Shapra (also known as Candoshi, Candoxi, Kandoshi, Kandozi-Chapra, and Murato) is an indigenous American language isolate, spoken by several thousand people in western South America along the Chapuli, Huitoyacu, Pastaza, and Morona river valleys. There are two dialects, Chapara (also spelled Shapra) and Kandoashi (Kandozi). It is an official language of Peru, like other native languages in the areas in which they are spoken and are the predominant language in use. Around 88.5 percent of the speakers are bilingual with Spanish. The literacy rate in Candoshi-Shapra is 10 to 30 percent and 15 to 25 percent in the second language Spanish. There is a Candoshi-Shapra dictionary, and grammar rules have been codified." .
ex:cane1242 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cerr1237,
ex:core1264,
ex:jeee1236,
ex:jese1235,
ex:nucl1710,
ex:sout3244,
ex:timb1253 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00694 0.01900 -0.00387 0.03630 0.03014 -0.01449 -0.02566 -0.02787 0.02277 -0.02370 ..." ;
ex:iso "ram" ;
ex:label "Central-Southern Timbira" ;
ex:latitude -6.10712e+00 ;
ex:longitude -4.51299e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:apan1243,
ex:cane1243,
ex:cent2420,
,
,
ex:krin1238,
ex:ramk1239 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:kaya1330,
ex:krey1238 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2932e-01,
5.3079e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Canela is a dialect of the Canela-Krahô language, a Timbira variety of the Northern Jê language group (Jê, Macro-Jê) spoken by the Apànjêkra (Apaniêkrá) and by the Mẽmõrtũmre (Ràmkôkãmẽkra, Ramkokamekrá) in Maranhão, Brazil.: 11
The Kenkateye dialect has been extinct since 1913 due to the massacre of the tribe by cattle ranchers.
""" .
ex:cara1271 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:choc1280,
ex:unun9901 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01371 0.01188 -0.00694 0.02658 0.01440 -0.02761 -0.00741 -0.03398 0.00834 -0.00625 ..." ;
ex:iso "crf" ;
ex:label "Caramanta" ;
ex:latitude 5.624e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.5877e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:anda1286,
ex:ando1254 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2987e-01,
5.3348e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Colombia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Caramanta is an extinct Chocoan language of Colombia, documented solely through a wordlist from the 1940s, and in an ethnographic publication from 1954. It is sometimes described as a dialect of Anserma." .
ex:cari1275 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:bhoj1246,
ex:biha1245,
ex:clas1257,
ex:cont1248,
ex:indo1319,
ex:indo1320,
ex:indo1321,
ex:mait1254,
ex:midd1375,
ex:midl1245,
ex:shau1239 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00625 0.02170 -0.01372 0.03144 0.03103 -0.02997 -0.03098 -0.00553 0.02268 0.01570 ..." ;
ex:iso "hns" ;
ex:label "Caribbean Hindustani" ;
ex:latitude 5.722918e+00 ;
ex:longitude -5.533317e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:sarn1238,
ex:trin1268 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:guia1246,
ex:trin1276 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.379e-01,
5.4617e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Trinidad y Tobago" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua indoaria" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "165000" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Caribbean Hindustani (Devanagari: कैरेबियाई हिंदुस्तानी; Kaithi: 𑂍𑂶𑂩𑂵𑂥𑂱𑂨𑂰𑂆⸱𑂯𑂱𑂁𑂠𑂳𑂮𑂹𑂞𑂰𑂢𑂲; Perso-Arabic: کَیریبیائی ہندوستانی) is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by Indo-Caribbean people and the Indo-Caribbean diaspora. It is a koiné language mainly based on the Bhojpuri and Awadhi dialects. These Hindustani dialects were the most spoken dialects by the Indians who came as immigrants to the Caribbean from India as indentured laborers. It is closely related to Fiji Hindi and the Bhojpuri-Hindustani spoken in Mauritius and South Africa.
Because a majority of people came from the Bhojpur region in Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand, and the Awadh region in Uttar Pradesh, Caribbean Hindustani is most influenced by Bhojpuri, Awadhi and other Eastern Hindi-Bihari dialects. Hindustani (Standard Hindi-Standard Urdu) has also influenced the language due to the arrival of Bollywood films, music, and other media from India. It also has a minor influence from Tamil and other South Asian languages. The language has also borrowed many words from Dutch and English in Suriname and Guyana, and English and French in Trinidad and Tobago. Many words unique to Caribbean Hindustani have been created to cater for the new environment that Indo-Caribbean people now live in. After the introduction of Standard Hindustani to the Caribbean, Caribbean Hindustani was seen by many Indo-Caribbean people as a broken version of Hindi, however due to later academic research it was seen as deriving from Bhojpuri, Awadhi, and other dialects and was in fact not a broken language, but its own unique language mainly deriving from the Bhojpuri and Awadhi dialects, and not the Khariboli dialect like Standard Hindi and Urdu did, thus the difference.
Caribbean Hindustani is spoken as a vernacular by Indo-Caribbean people, independent of their religious background. Although, Hindus tend to incorporate more Sanskrit derived vocabulary and Muslim tend to incorporate more Persian, Arabic, and Turkic derived vocabulary, similar to the Standard Hindi-Urdu divide of the Hindustani language. When written, the Devanagari script is used by Hindus, while some Muslims tend to use the Perso-Arabic script in the Nastaliq calligraphic hand following the Urdu alphabet; historically, the Kaithi script was also used. However, due to the decline in the language these scripts are not widely used and most often the Latin script is used due to familiarity and easiness.
Chutney music, chutney soca, chutney parang, baithak gana, folk music, classical music, some Hindu religious songs, some Muslim religious songs, and even some Indian Christian religious songs are sung in Caribbean Hindustani, sometimes being mixed with English in the Anglophone Caribbean or Dutch in Suriname and the Dutch Caribbean.""" .
ex:cauq1239 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:ayma1253,
ex:tupe1234 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00160 0.01364 -0.01347 0.00724 0.01881 -0.00205 -0.02351 -0.02799 0.02031 0.01551 ..." ;
ex:label "Cauqui of Cachuy" ;
ex:latitude -1.271823e+01 ;
ex:longitude -7.591362e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:cail1238,
ex:vaup1239 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.1135e-01,
5.117e-01 .
ex:cena1234 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:deaf1237,
ex:sign1238 ;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.02456 0.03247 -0.00568 0.02690 0.02641 -0.00570 -0.00596 -0.03736 0.04837 0.02341 ..." ;
ex:label "Cena" ;
ex:latitude -7.54013e+00 ;
ex:longitude -4.125213e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:kaja1257,
ex:maxa1248 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.1284e-01,
5.1457e-01 .
ex:chan1296 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:char1238 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00381 0.02435 -0.01339 0.01788 0.03130 -0.02088 -0.02145 -0.03414 0.01293 0.01072 ..." ;
ex:label "Chaná" ;
ex:latitude -3.369e+01 ;
ex:longitude -5.778e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:char1240,
ex:guen1235 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.326e-01,
5.3512e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """The Chaná language (autolinguonym: Lanték, meaning "speak" or "language"; from lan, "tongue" and tek, a communicative suffix) is one of the Charruan languages spoken by the Chaná people in what is now Argentina and Uruguay along the Uruguay and Paraná Rivers on the margins of the Río de la Plata. It was spoken by the Chaná from pre-Columbian times in the vast region that today is between Entre Ríos Province, Argentina and Uruguay, and the Uruguay and Paraná Guazú Rivers. According to recent oral memory narratives, in ancient times, they inhabited territories around the current Brazilian margin of the Uruguay River. They later migrated from this location along the Uruguay and Paraná Rivers from the outfall of the Iguazú River and from the Paraguay River to the current location of Asunción.
UNESCO recognizes it as a living language but also as "extremely endangered" because it has only one native speaker. The Chamber of Deputies of the Entre Ríos Province recently recognized the necessity for the government to recognize and protect the language.""" .
ex:chay1248 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cahu1265 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00948 0.02193 -0.01643 0.01522 0.03385 -0.02246 -0.01613 -0.03076 0.02378 0.02634 ..." ;
ex:iso "cbt" ;
ex:label "Shawi" ;
ex:latitude -5.63764e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.68252e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:cahu1266,
ex:jesu1239,
ex:nucl1664,
ex:sill1241 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:cash1254,
ex:chac1250 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2967e-01,
5.3036e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "14000" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Chayahuita is an endangered Amazonian language spoken by thousands of native Chayahuita people in the Amazon basin of north-central Peru. Spoken along the banks of the Paranapura, Cahuapanas, Sillay, and Shanusi rivers, it is also known as Chayawita, Shawi, Chawi, Tshaahui, Chayhuita, Chayabita, Shayabit, Balsapuertino, Paranapura, and Cahuapa. There is a 1–5% literacy rate, compared with 5–15% for Spanish, and a dictionary since 1978. It can not be understood by Jebero speakers although there is some overlap in vocabulary, especially some Quechua terms." .
ex:chir1294 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:boli1261,
ex:main1279,
ex:pano1256,
ex:pano1257,
ex:pano1259,
ex:unun9985 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00755 0.00982 -0.01629 0.02726 0.04119 -0.02908 -0.00692 -0.02941 0.00474 0.02100 ..." ;
ex:label "Chiriva" ;
ex:latitude -1.35e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.63e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:mori1273,
ex:reye1240 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3488e-01,
5.3513e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Chiriba (Chiriva) is a poorly attested language of Moxos Province, Bolivia which may have belonged to the Panoan family. All that was recorded of it was a list of seven words; several of these resemble Panoan languages, especially Pakawara, and none resemble other language families. Unattested Chumana is reported to have been related." .
ex:cint1239 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:gavi1248,
ex:gavi1250,
ex:mond1266,
ex:tupi1275 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01109 0.00619 0.00061 0.01128 0.02518 -0.00792 -0.00675 -0.01908 0.00234 0.02595 ..." ;
ex:iso "cin" ;
ex:label "Cinta Larga" ;
ex:latitude -1.05879e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.08312e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:para1310,
ex:tapi1254 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3384e-01,
5.3624e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Cinta Larga is a Tupian dialect cluster of Brazil, the largest language of the Monde branch.
According to Moore (2005), Arara do Rio Guariba (Guariba River Arara), spoken in the northern part of Aripuanã Indigenous Park, is closely related to the Cinta Larga dialect cluster, and also shares some features with Suruí. 26 words were collected by Hargreaves in 2001. It remains unclassified due to the lack of data.""" .
ex:coca1259 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:awet1245,
ex:east2909,
ex:mawe1252,
ex:omag1247,
ex:sout3271,
ex:tupi1275,
ex:tupi1276,
ex:tupi1287 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01408 0.01954 0.00460 0.01166 0.02548 -0.00765 -0.02294 -0.03120 -0.00040 0.00898 ..." ;
ex:iso "cod" ;
ex:label "Cocama-Cocamilla" ;
ex:latitude -4.5e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.4e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:coca1260,
ex:coca1261 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:bora1263,
ex:muru1274 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3098e-01,
5.3187e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Colombia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua sudamericana" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "250" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Cocama (Kokáma) is a language spoken by thousands of people in western South America. It is spoken along the banks of the Northeastern lower Ucayali, lower Marañón, and Huallaga rivers and in neighboring areas of Brazil and an isolated area in Colombia. There are three dialects. The robust dialect is known as Cocama, Kokama, Kukama-Kukamiria, Ucayali, Xibitaoan, Huallaga, Pampadeque, and Pandequebo. By 1999, Cocamilla (Kokamíya) was moribund, being only spoken by people over 40.
Out of a projected ethnic population of 15,000, the majority of Cocama speakers, 2,000, live in Peru. Remaining speakers live in Amazonas state in Brazil, where 50 out of 411 ethnic Chayahuitas speak it and it is known as Kokama or Kokamilla. Most speakers are trilingual and can also speak Portuguese and Spanish. Very few are monolingual. There are 20 ethnic groups in Colombia's Lower Putumayo area with an unknown number of Cocama-Cocamilla speakers. Most expected speakers would also be trilingual, but the language may be extinct in the region.
Cocama speakers have a 3% literacy rate, compared with 50% for Spanish. Grammar rules have been developed and the language is written using the Latin script. Parts of the Bible have been translated into the language.
Cocama is closely related to Omagua, a nearly extinct language spoken in Peru and Brazil.""" .
ex:colo1254 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:alem1243,
ex:clas1257,
ex:germ1287,
ex:high1286,
ex:high1289,
ex:indo1319,
ex:midd1349,
ex:mode1258,
ex:nort3152,
ex:nort3310,
ex:west2793 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01352 0.02205 -0.02208 0.01349 0.02123 -0.01562 -0.02014 -0.02079 0.01509 0.01176 ..." ;
ex:iso "gct" ;
ex:label "Colonia Tovar German" ;
ex:latitude 1.04853e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.72579e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:avac1239,
ex:toba1269 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.4324e-01,
5.4462e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Venezuela" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "The Colonia Tovar dialect, or Alemán Coloniero, is a dialect that is spoken in Colonia Tovar, Venezuela, and belongs to the Low Alemannic branch of German." .
ex:colo1256 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:awas1234,
ex:barb1265,
ex:caya1244 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00174 0.02160 -0.01705 0.01538 0.02406 -0.01331 -0.01169 -0.02690 0.00371 0.00698 ..." ;
ex:iso "cof" ;
ex:label "Tsafiki" ;
ex:latitude -2.1181e-01 ;
ex:longitude -7.92347e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:chac1249,
ex:waim1255 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3927e-01,
5.394e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Ecuador" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "2300" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Tsafiki, also known as Tsachila or Colorado, is a Barbacoan language spoken in Ecuador by c. 2000 ethnic Tsáchila people." .
ex:coro1247 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cent2141,
ex:coro1255,
ex:huay1239,
ex:quec1386,
ex:quec1387 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00070 0.02340 -0.01291 0.01777 0.03587 -0.00987 -0.01761 -0.02754 0.03383 0.00513 ..." ;
ex:iso "qwa" ;
ex:label "Corongo Ancash Quechua" ;
ex:latitude -8.57647e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.79864e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:nort2979,
ex:sout2992 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.1095e-01,
5.1099e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "variedad del quechua ancashino hablado en la provincia de Corongo" .
ex:coro1249 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:puri1261 ;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01892 0.02271 -0.01812 0.01248 0.01784 -0.01455 -0.02740 -0.02332 0.01897 0.02838 ..." ;
ex:label "Coroado-Puri" ;
ex:latitude -2.026403e+01 ;
ex:longitude -4.3612e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:maip1247,
ex:mura1278 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.103e-01,
5.1041e-01 .
ex:cure1236 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:east2698,
ex:sout3144,
ex:tuca1253 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.01332 0.02067 -0.00628 0.02118 0.01622 -0.04277 -0.01830 -0.02853 0.01998 0.02965 ..." ;
ex:label "Kueretu" ;
ex:latitude -1.045978e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.030586e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:coer1236,
ex:kust1238 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2624e-01,
5.2728e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Cueretú (Curetu) is an extinct language of the Amazon basin. It is a Tucanoan language, but more recently has been left unclassified due to sparsity of data." .
ex:demu1235 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:mats1243,
ex:mayo1269,
ex:mayo1277,
ex:pano1256,
ex:pano1259 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00969 0.02484 -0.01681 0.01897 0.02018 -0.02587 -0.00714 -0.01723 0.00625 0.00422 ..." ;
ex:label "Demushbo" ;
ex:latitude -4.837565e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.087372e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:remo1249,
ex:remo1250 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.1974e-01,
5.1997e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Demushbo (Dëmushbo), or ambiguously Remo, is a recently extinct Panoan language of the Brazilian Amazon basin, near the Peruvian border." .
ex:deni1241 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:araw1282,
ex:madi1262,
ex:madi1263 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00534 0.00919 -0.00838 0.00112 0.02849 -0.03079 -0.00501 -0.02791 0.00294 0.01313 ..." ;
ex:iso "dny" ;
ex:label "Deni" ;
ex:latitude -6.74962e+00 ;
ex:longitude -6.75029e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:bomf1238,
ex:inau1238,
ex:mamo1239,
ex:paui1240 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:jama1261,
ex:suru1263 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3502e-01,
5.3759e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua indígena brasileña" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "740" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Deni (also Dení, Dani) is an Arawan language spoken in Brazil. Deni is very similar to the other languages of the Arawan language family, but is especially similar to the Jamamadi language." .
ex:desa1247 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cube1243,
ex:east2698,
ex:siri1280,
ex:tuca1253,
ex:west2789,
ex:yupu1234 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01477 0.03025 -0.01466 -0.00074 0.01419 -0.03427 -0.01795 -0.01846 0.00273 0.00849 ..." ;
ex:iso "des" ;
ex:label "Desano" ;
ex:latitude 5.8157e-01 ;
ex:longitude -6.94955e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:siri1274,
ex:tuca1252 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2327e-01,
5.3014e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Colombia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua de la Amazonia" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "6000" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Desano is a Tucanoan language of Colombia and Brazil. There are several alternative names, including Boleka, Desâna, and Kusibi. It is spoken primarily in northwest Brazil and southern Colombia." .
ex:djeo1235 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:jabu1249,
ex:nucl1710 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00278 0.00761 -0.02143 0.00733 0.03663 -0.02367 -0.01187 -0.02068 0.02110 0.00608 ..." ;
ex:iso "jbt" ;
ex:label "Djeoromitxí" ;
ex:latitude -1.2038e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.46694e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:yaro1235,
ex:yawa1261 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3058e-01,
5.3114e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Djeoromitxi or Jabutí (Yabuti) is an endangered Yabutian language that is spoken by only about fifty people (though including some children) in Rondônia, Brazil, at the headwaters of the Rio Branco." .
ex:enap1235 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cari1283,
ex:pemo1246,
ex:vene1261 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00632 0.00640 -0.00580 0.00679 0.02979 -0.02091 -0.02046 -0.02848 0.01566 -0.00504 ..." ;
ex:iso "pbh" ;
ex:label "Panare" ;
ex:latitude 6.95035e+00 ;
ex:longitude -6.58483e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:gali1262,
ex:pana1307 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3131e-01,
5.3504e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Venezuela" ;
ex:wikidata_description "idioma de la familia caribe hablado por el grupo indígena venezolano homónimo" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "3500" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Panare is a Cariban language, spoken by the Panare, who number 3,000–4,000 and live in Bolivar State in central Venezuela. Their main area is South of the town of Caicara del Orinoco, south of the Orinoco River. There are several subdialects of the language. The autonym for this language and people is e'ñapá, which has various senses depending on context, including 'people', 'indigenous-people', and 'Panare-people'. The term \"Panare\" itself is a Tupí word that means \"friend.\" It is unusual in having object–verb–agent as one of its main word orders, the other being the more common verb–agent–object. It also displays the typologically uncommon property of an ergative–absolutive alignment in the non-perfective aspects and a nominative–accusative alignment in perfective aspect." .
ex:epen1239 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:choc1280,
ex:embe1258,
ex:sanj1278 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01491 0.02708 0.00010 0.01801 0.02975 -0.02615 -0.01809 -0.01108 -0.00150 0.01412 ..." ;
ex:iso "sja" ;
ex:label "Epena" ;
ex:latitude 4.25877e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.73566e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:basu1242 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:embe1259,
ex:nort2972 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.321e-01,
5.3342e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Colombia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "3802" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Eperara a.k.a. Epena (Southern Embera) is an Embera language of Colombia, with about 250 speakers in Ecuador." .
ex:fuln1247 a ex:Language ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00284 0.02115 -0.01032 0.01909 0.02707 -0.04739 -0.01416 -0.02552 0.01243 0.00939 ..." ;
ex:iso "fun" ;
ex:label "Fulniô" ;
ex:latitude -9.02591e+00 ;
ex:longitude -3.71402e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:fuln1248,
ex:yate1241 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:juru1256,
ex:xere1240 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3502e-01,
5.352e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Fulniô, or Yatê, is a language isolate of Brazil, and the only indigenous language remaining in the northeastern part of that country. The two dialects, Fulniô and Yatê, are very close. The Fulniô dialect is used primarily during a three-month religious retreat. Today, the language is spoken in Águas Belas, Pernambuco.
The language is also called Carnijó, and alternate spellings are Fornió, Furniô, Yahthe, and Iatê.""" .
ex:geic1236 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:nucl1710,
ex:uncl1544 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.01363 0.01119 -0.00854 0.01068 0.02580 -0.03472 -0.00930 -0.02635 0.00390 -0.00293 ..." ;
ex:label "Jeicó" ;
ex:latitude -6.56e+00 ;
ex:longitude -4.3e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:coro1248,
ex:paya1236 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2931e-01,
5.2957e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Jaikó (Jeicó, Jeikó, Yeico, Geico, Eyco) is an extinct language of southeastern Piauí, Brazil.
""" .
ex:guam1236 a ex:Language ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00924 0.01692 -0.01387 0.00904 0.02949 -0.03821 -0.00846 -0.02597 0.01447 -0.00325 ..." ;
ex:label "Guamo" ;
ex:latitude 8.235103e+00 ;
ex:longitude -6.740188e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:sanj1287,
ex:sant1461 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:guac1239,
ex:otom1301 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3025e-01,
5.3035e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Guamo (a.k.a. Wamo or Guamotey) is an extinct language of Venezuela. Kaufman (1990) finds a connection with the Chapacuran languages convincing." .
ex:guat1253 a ex:Language ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01240 0.02878 -0.01290 0.00188 0.03320 -0.03122 -0.02280 -0.03918 0.02608 0.01665 ..." ;
ex:iso "gta" ;
ex:label "Guató" ;
ex:latitude -1.78696e+01 ;
ex:longitude -5.72897e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:boro1282,
ex:guaj1256 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2782e-01,
5.3514e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "4" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Guató is a possible language isolate spoken by 4 of the Guató people of Brazil. It has variously been claimed to be of Macro-Jê or isolate affiliation.
""" .
ex:hual1241 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:apam1237,
ex:cent2141,
ex:quec1386,
ex:quec1387 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00496 0.00462 0.00927 0.02003 0.03832 -0.01281 -0.02618 -0.01182 0.01519 -0.00288 ..." ;
ex:iso "qub" ;
ex:label "Huallaga Huánuco Quechua" ;
ex:latitude -9.57135e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.5594e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:caja1238,
ex:yauy1235 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2677e-01,
5.2963e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "variante del quechua en Huánuco" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "40000" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Huallaga Quechua is a dialect within the Alto Pativilca–Alto Marañón–Alto Huallaga dialect cluster of the Quechua languages. The dialect is spoken in the Central Huánuco region of Peru, primarily in the Huánuco Province districts of Huánuco, Churubamba, Santa María del Valle, San Francisco de Cayrán, and Conchamarca." .
ex:huam1248 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cent2141,
ex:huay1239,
ex:quec1386,
ex:quec1387 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00355 0.00694 -0.01734 0.01756 0.02475 -0.00820 -0.02367 -0.03229 0.02929 0.01081 ..." ;
ex:iso "qvh" ;
ex:label "Huamalíes-Dos de Mayo Huánuco Quechua" ;
ex:latitude -9.15718e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.63372e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:huam1249,
ex:monz1251,
ex:nort2978 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:chin1483,
ex:pana1306 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.0977e-01,
5.1132e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" .
ex:huay1240 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cent2141,
ex:huay1239,
ex:quec1386,
ex:quec1387 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00536 0.01293 -0.00537 0.02066 0.03422 -0.01818 -0.02215 -0.02066 0.01470 -0.00574 ..." ;
ex:iso "qwh" ;
ex:label "Huaylas Ancash Quechua" ;
ex:latitude -9.38709e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.77768e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:huai1241,
ex:huar1256,
ex:yung1256 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:chac1250,
ex:yauy1235 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3194e-01,
5.3226e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "variante del quechua hablada en el Callejón de Huaylas" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Huaylas Quechua is an Ancash Quechua dialect spoken in the Callejón de Huaylas and in the western slope of the Cordillera Negra.
The main peculiarities of this variety are phonetic. In Quechua Ancash-Huailas a phenomenon of monophthongation of syllables with semiconsonants in coda is present: "aw" is often pronounced as [oː] elongated, likewise "ay" as [eː]. For example, awmi is pronounced [oːmi], chawpi (center) [t͡ʃoːpi] and aywan (walks) as [eːwan]. In grammatical terms, Huaylas lacks the suffix -ski.""" .
ex:huil1244 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:arau1255 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00180 0.02314 -0.00278 0.01431 0.02476 -0.00963 -0.02403 -0.00331 0.01416 0.03040 ..." ;
ex:iso "huh" ;
ex:label "Huilliche" ;
ex:latitude -4.00694e+01 ;
ex:longitude -7.2767e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:tses1238 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:mapu1245,
ex:pich1237 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3282e-01,
5.3673e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Chile" ;
ex:wikidata_description "dialecto sureño del mapudungun hablado en Chile" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Huilliche (which can also be found spelt Williche, Huiliche or Veliche) is a moribund branch of the Araucanian language family. In 1982 it was spoken by about 2,000 ethnic Huilliche people in Chile, but now [when?] it is only spoken by a few elderly speakers. It is spoken in the nation's Los Lagos and Los Ríos regions; and mountain valleys, between the city of Valdivia and south toward the Chiloé Archipelago.
Huilliche is composed of at least two varieties, called Huillichesungun and Tsesungun by their speakers. Huillichesungun is spoken in Wequetrumao, on the island of Chiloé, and Tsesungun is spoken in Choroy Traiguen, on the coast of Osorno province. Huilliche is closely related to Mapudungun, the language of the Mapuche, though more research is needed to determine the degree of mutual intelligibility between the two.
The "Enduring Voices" project of National Geographic reports the following:"They are to some degree hidden within the broader Mapuche ethnic group, yet consider themselves quite distinct in both language and identity [...] Though the two languages [Huillichesungun and Tsesungun] may share as many as 80% of basic words, we confirmed that they differ in their sounds and grammar, as well as in their ethno-linguistic identity [...] Unexpectedly, Tsesungun, though it is geographically closer to Mapudungun, is less similar to it."The Jesuit priest Luis de Valdivia reported in 1606 that there was linguistic unity in the territory between Coquimbo and Chiloé, from the Pacific to the Andes, and that this was composed of varieties whose differences were mostly in pronunciation and vocabulary. This analysis is supported by researchers at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century, such as Félix José de Augusta or Rodolfo Lenz, and by those in the second half of the 20th century, such as Robert Croese. The latter two noted that Huilliche was the most divergent of the varieties of Araucanian, as did Pilar Álvarez-Santullano, a researcher in the phonology and syntax of Chesungun on the Osorno coast. A 2015 study found that the degree of mutual intelligibility was not possible to evaluate at present given that speakers of Huilliche were too few and with scant linguistic competence, nevertheless with the evidence available authors regarded Huilliche a variety of Mapudungun.
Most Huilliche speakers are older adults, and most ethnic Huilliche speak Spanish as their first language, making both Huilliche varieties highly endangered.""" .
ex:iten1243 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:chap1271,
ex:more1263,
ex:more1264,
ex:nucl1662 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01032 0.02618 -0.00937 0.01876 0.04131 -0.03143 0.00683 -0.00950 0.01846 0.01617 ..." ;
ex:iso "ite" ;
ex:label "Itene" ;
ex:latitude -1.22994e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.49841e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:itor1239 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:iton1250,
ex:mure1235 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3472e-01,
5.3684e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Bolivia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "90" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Itene (Moré) is a Chapacuran language of Bolivia. Itoreauhip is a dialect." .
ex:jaqa1244 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:ayma1253,
ex:tupe1234 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00396 0.02128 -0.00104 0.02105 0.02663 -0.02512 -0.02896 -0.02932 0.01003 -0.00015 ..." ;
ex:iso "jqr" ;
ex:label "Jaqaru" ;
ex:latitude -1.274194e+01 ;
ex:longitude -7.580923e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:chip1262,
ex:nort2980 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3193e-01,
5.3598e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "idioma indígena peruano" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "448" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Jaqaru or Jacaru is a language of the Aymaran family. It is also known as Jaqi and Aru. It is spoken in the districts of Tupe and Catahuasi in Yauyos Province, Lima Region, Peru. Most of the 2,000 ethnic Jaqaru have migrated to Lima.
Kawki, a divergent dialect, is spoken in the nearby communities of Cachuy, Canchán, Caipán and Chavín by a few elderly individuals (9 surviving in early 2005). Hardman has noted that while Jaqaru and Kawki share a degree of mutual intelligibility, speakers of one were unable to understand tape recordings of the other, and in a few cases of marriage between Kawki and Jaqaru speakers, the home language was Spanish. (However, the home language of most Jaqaru and Kawki is now Spanish.) Historical analysis shows that the two languages were out of contact for a period. The name Tupe is used for Jaqaru and Kawki together.
There exist clear differences between Jaqaru and Kawki in regard to morphology. Jaqaru has ten verb persons, whereas Kawki has only nine (due to a case of homophony wherein Kawki maintained the semantic distinction between two different person markers, but lost the form distinction between the two). Additionally, regressive vowel harmony is present throughout the verb person system in Jaqaru, but does not appear in Kawki. Phonologically, Kawki is differentiated from Jaqaru in its vowel system. Jaqaru contains six vowels- three of regular length and three short, whereas Kawki has only the three regular-length vowels.""" .
ex:juma1250 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:araw1281,
ex:icaa1241,
ex:japu1236,
ex:japu1237 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00831 0.01639 -0.01438 0.03555 0.03158 -0.03180 -0.01610 -0.00783 0.00504 0.02820 ..." ;
ex:label "Jumana" ;
ex:latitude -1.930054e+00 ;
ex:longitude -6.829561e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:para1309,
ex:uiri1238 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2762e-01,
5.3149e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Yumana (Jumana, Xomana, Ximana) is an extinct, poorly attested, and unclassified Arawakan language. Kaufman (1994) placed it in his Río Negro branch, but this is not followed in Aikhenvald (1999). It is attested only in a wordlist from Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius and Johann Baptist von Spix in 1867." .
ex:kari1254 a ex:Language ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01141 0.00864 -0.00184 0.01587 0.02426 -0.02190 -0.02112 -0.03190 0.00403 0.01908 ..." ;
ex:label "Kariri" ;
ex:latitude -7.434628e+00 ;
ex:longitude -4.048727e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:dzub1241,
ex:kamu1237,
ex:kipe1235,
ex:sabu1246 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:baka1277,
ex:gali1262 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3578e-01,
5.3605e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "The Karirí languages, generally considered dialects of a single language, are a group of languages formerly spoken by the Kiriri people of Brazil. It was spoken until the middle of the 20th century; the 4,000 ethnic Kiriri are now monolingual Portuguese speakers, though a few know common phrases and names of medicinal plants. A revival of the Dzubukuá variety has been ongoing since 1989." .
ex:karo1305 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:puru1268,
ex:rama1257,
ex:tupi1275 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00277 0.00583 0.00620 0.02041 0.01884 -0.04689 -0.02537 -0.01440 0.01177 -0.00518 ..." ;
ex:iso "arr" ;
ex:label "Karo (Brazil)" ;
ex:latitude -1.03342e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.15691e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:karo1306,
ex:ntag1234,
ex:rama1273,
ex:uruk1241 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:maku1278,
ex:para1310 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3107e-01,
5.3342e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "210" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Ramarama, also known as Karo, is a Tupian language of Brazil.
Unusually for the indigenous languages of South America in general and Tupian in particular, Ramarama is a fairly analytic language, with limited affixation and a strict SOV word order. However, the language also displays complex processes of morphophonological alternation, segmental allophony, and interaction between segmental and suprasegmental phonology.""" .
ex:kaxa1239 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:main1279,
ex:pano1256,
ex:pano1259 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00749 0.01889 -0.00983 0.01475 0.01663 -0.03315 -0.01575 -0.01277 0.01258 -0.01132 ..." ;
ex:iso "ktx" ;
ex:label "Kaxararí" ;
ex:latitude -9.47288e+00 ;
ex:longitude -6.63329e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:baka1277,
ex:pano1254 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2902e-01,
5.3099e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "270" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Kaxararí is a Panoan language of Brazil. It is spoken around the northwest border of the State of Rondônia. The Kaxarari language is the most divergent of the Mainline Panoan branch." .
ex:kaxu1237 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cari1283,
ex:paru1239 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00014 0.01656 -0.01896 0.02336 0.02933 -0.01428 -0.02053 -0.01900 0.02349 0.01871 ..." ;
ex:iso "kbb" ;
ex:label "Kaxuiâna" ;
ex:latitude 2.17138e+00 ;
ex:longitude -5.59101e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:cunu1237,
ex:decu1237,
ex:ihur1237,
ex:pawi1238 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:lako1248,
ex:para1315 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.0967e-01,
5.0995e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" .
ex:kimd1235 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:inga1253,
ex:jeee1236,
ex:jeme1246,
ex:nucl1710 ;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01498 0.02379 -0.01016 0.01118 0.02623 -0.01631 -0.02151 -0.03093 0.01160 0.02490 ..." ;
ex:label "Kimda" ;
ex:latitude -2.582659e+01 ;
ex:longitude -5.462586e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:chum1263,
ex:kipe1235 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.0698e-01,
5.0731e-01 .
ex:kore1283 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:kore1286,
ex:tuca1253,
ex:west2784 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.01092 0.01718 -0.01330 0.01628 0.02189 -0.03122 -0.01695 -0.02694 0.02334 0.00749 ..." ;
ex:iso "coe" ;
ex:label "Koreguaje" ;
ex:latitude 9.2316e-01 ;
ex:longitude -7.53475e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:maca1261,
ex:tatu1247 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2795e-01,
5.3402e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Colombia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "2100" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary """Korebaju, Korebajʉ, Coreguaje (Korewaje, Ko'reuaju) is a Tucanoan language of Colombia.
The language was spoken in the film Out of the Dark.
""" .
ex:latu1238 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:namb1299,
ex:namb1300,
ex:nort3153,
ex:roos1235 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00002 0.00448 -0.02097 0.01549 0.02622 -0.00111 -0.02005 -0.02502 0.01981 0.02910 ..." ;
ex:iso "ltn" ;
ex:label "Latundê" ;
ex:latitude -1.260879e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.042242e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:lako1248,
ex:tawa1278 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.0875e-01,
5.0951e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Brasil" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "10" .
ex:lore1243 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:cast1243,
ex:clas1257,
ex:impe1234,
ex:indo1319,
ex:ital1284,
ex:ital1285,
ex:lati1262,
ex:lati1263,
ex:roma1334,
ex:shif1234,
ex:sout3183,
ex:sout3200,
ex:west2813,
ex:west2838 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00568 0.02319 -0.01003 0.02274 0.02174 -0.02054 -0.02615 -0.03803 0.02242 0.02000 ..." ;
ex:iso "spq" ;
ex:label "Peruvian Amazonian Spanish" ;
ex:latitude -4.74563e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.36507e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:amah1246,
ex:urar1246 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3205e-01,
5.3494e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Perú" ;
ex:wikidata_description "variante dialectal del idioma español hablado en la región de la Amazonía en América del Sur" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Amazonic Spanish (español amazónico), also known as Charapa Spanish, Loreto-Ucayali Spanish or informally known in Peru simply as Jungle Spanish (español de la selva), is a variety of Spanish spoken in the Amazon, especially in the Peruvian provinces of Loreto, San Martín and Ucayali. Amazonic Spanish is also spoken in areas of Brazil adjoining Loreto and Ucayali and in the Amazonas Department of Colombia." .
ex:mabe1235 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:pano1259,
ex:taca1255,
ex:unun9984 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00143 0.02608 -0.01538 0.00662 0.02376 -0.03195 -0.01080 -0.02577 -0.00682 0.03024 ..." ;
ex:label "Mabenaro" ;
ex:latitude -1.154381e+01 ;
ex:longitude -6.827774e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:jebe1250,
ex:mapi1252 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.3561e-01,
5.3619e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Mabenaro is a Tacanan language spoken, or at least once spoken, along the Madre de Dios River of Peru. It is known only from a list of 54 words which are not very well transcribed." .
ex:maca1259 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:guah1252,
ex:nucl1828 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
,
,
,
,
,
,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.00516 0.03869 -0.01474 -0.00293 0.02240 -0.02140 -0.02442 -0.02752 0.02045 0.01828 ..." ;
ex:iso "mbn" ;
ex:label "Hitnu" ;
ex:latitude 6.34582e+00 ;
ex:longitude -7.12671e+01 ;
ex:relatedTo ex:maca1265,
ex:maca1266 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:guah1255,
ex:guay1257 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.2922e-01,
5.2958e-01 ;
ex:wikidata_countries "Colombia" ;
ex:wikidata_description "lengua" ;
ex:wikidata_speakers "513" ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Macaguán (Hitnü) is a Guahiban language that was spoken by about 400 people in Colombia. Many of its speakers are monoglots." .
ex:macu1258 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:maxa1246,
ex:maxa1249,
ex:nucl1710,
ex:nucl1842,
ex:unun9898 ;
ex:embeddingPreview "0.01120 0.01874 -0.00891 0.00976 0.02839 -0.01774 -0.01973 -0.03718 0.01388 0.01291 ..." ;
ex:label "Macuni" ;
ex:latitude -1.790479e+01 ;
ex:longitude -3.980942e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:iran1264,
ex:maip1246 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.07e-01,
5.0731e-01 .
ex:mala1432 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:maxa1246,
ex:maxa1249,
ex:nucl1710 ;
ex:describedByResource ,
;
ex:embeddingPreview "-0.00531 0.01307 0.00016 0.01785 0.02279 -0.03939 -0.00619 -0.01750 0.01627 0.00658 ..." ;
ex:label "Malali" ;
ex:latitude -1.683399e+01 ;
ex:longitude -4.228272e+01 ;
ex:semanticallySimilarTo ex:kust1238,
ex:otom1301 ;
ex:similarityScore 5.261e-01,
5.2636e-01 ;
ex:wikipedia_summary "Malalí is an extinct Maxakalian language of Brazil." .
ex:mana1299 a ex:Language ;
ex:belongsToFamily ex:araw1281,
ex:bahu1238,
ex:cari1286,
ex:negr1239 ;
ex:describedByResource ,