arn ISO 639

Mapudungun Autonyms

Mapudungun

  • Geography

    CL Araucanía, Bíobío, Los Lagos, and Los Ríos regions: Arauco, Bíobío, Valdivia, Osorno.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Chile

arn
Araucana, Mapuche, Mapudungu, Mapuzungun, “Araucano” (pej.)
Mapudungun
250,000 in Chile (Crevels 2007). Ethnic population: 604,000 (2002). Total users in all countries: 258,410.
Araucanía, Bíobío, Los Lagos, and Los Ríos regions: Arauco, Bíobío, Valdivia, Osorno.
Argentina and Chile
6b (Threatened). Recognized language (1993, Indigenous Peoples Law (No. 19.253)).
Mapudungu
Moluche (Manzanero, Ngoluche), Picunche, Pehuenche. Easy intelligibility among dialects. Pehuenche and Moluche are reportedly very similar.
Free word order; prepositions; noun head final; dual number; definite and indefinite articles; verb affixes mark person, number; passives; causatives; 19 consonant and 6 vowel phonemes; non-tonal; stress on penultimate syllable (vowel-final) or final syllable (consonant-final).
Some young people, all adults. Also use Spanish [spa].
Literacy rate in L2: 21%. 85,000 are literate in Spanish [spa]. Intercultural Bilingual Education programs may contribute to the survival of Mapundung (Crevels 2007). Radio. Dictionary. Grammar. Texts. NT: 1997–2011.
Latin script [Latn].
Traditional religion, Christian.
OLAC resources in and about Mapudungun
Mapudungun
8,410 in Argentina (2004 census). Ethnic population: 114,000 (2004).
Neuquén, Río Negro, and Chubut provinces; Mendoza province, possibly Buenos Aires.
Pehuenche.
8a (Moribund)
Mostly spoken by women with little outside contact. Language competence varies from fluent to passive (Crevels 2007). Older adults only. Shifted to Spanish [spa]. Used as L2 by Tehuelche [teh].
Recent migration from Chile.
View other languages of Argentina