myu ISO 639

Mõnjoroko Autonyms

Mundurukú

  • Geography

    BR Amazonas, Mato Grosso, and Pará states; middle Madeira, and middle and upper Tapajós rivers; 22 villages.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Brazil

myu
Caras-Pretas, Monjoroku, Mundurucu, Paiquize, Pari, Weidyenye
Mõnjoroko
8,000 (Crevels 2012). Ethnic population: 10,100 (2002 FUNASA).
Amazonas, Mato Grosso, and Pará states; middle Madeira, and middle and upper Tapajós rivers; 22 villages.
Central Brazil, Eastern Central Brazil
6b (Threatened).
Tupian, Mundurukú
SOV; 17 consonants and 20 vowels, contrasting in nasality and creaky voice.
Sai Cinza village and others villages on the Cururu river mostly monolingual in Mundurukú (2020 F. Gerardi). Some young people, all adults. Many also use Portuguese [por], especially in those communities where children use it as their L1 (Mangue, Praia do Índio, Terra Indígena Coatá-Laranjal, Amazonas). Portuguese is also used by many in Jacareacanga (with high proficiency), by men (more than women) in Sai Cinza, by those at the Roman Catholic mission on the Cururu, and by men in villages along the Cururu (for trade). Many women know daily greetings. Used as L2 by Apiaká [api], Apinagé [apn].
Grammar. NT: 1980.
Latin script [Latn].
Population formerly decimated by outsiders’ diseases and malaria is presently growing. Traditional religion, Christian.
OLAC resources in and about Mundurukú