quc ISO 639

Qach’abel Autonyms

K’iche’

  • Geography

    GT Quiché department: Chichicastenango, Chiché, Cunén, Joyabaj, Sacapulas, San Andrés Sajcabajá, Uspantán, Zacualpa municipalities; Quetzaltenango, Retalhuleu, Sololá, Suchitepéquez, and Totonicapán departments; some communities in Huehuetenango and Baja Verapaz departments.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Guatemala

quc
Central K’iche’, Central Quiché, Chiquel, Quiché
Qach’abel
1,050,000 (2019 census). 300,000 monolinguals. Ethnic population: 1,680,000 (2019 census).
Quiché department: Chichicastenango, Chiché, Cunén, Joyabaj, Sacapulas, San Andrés Sajcabajá, Uspantán, Zacualpa municipalities; Quetzaltenango, Retalhuleu, Sololá, Suchitepéquez, and Totonicapán departments; some communities in Huehuetenango and Baja Verapaz departments.
Guatemala
4 (Educational). Recognized language (2003, Law of National Languages, Decree 19).
Mayan, Yucatecan-Core Mayan, K’ichean-Mamean, K’ichean, Poqom-K’ichean, Core K’ichean
Cunén Kiché, Joyabaj Kiché, West Central Kiché, Eastern Kiché, San Andrés Kiché.
VOS; ergativity; passives (active, passive, antipassive); aspect; 24 consonant and 10 vowel phonemes; non-tonal; stress on penultimate or final syllable.
Vigorous. All domains, interpreters required in courts, some bilingual schools, oral use in religious services. Used by all. Positive attitudes. Many also use Spanish [spa]. Some also use Kaqchikel [cak]. A few also use Mam [mam]. A few also use Q’eqchi’ [kek]. A few also use Tz’utujil [tzj].
Literacy rate in L1: 5%–10%. Literacy rate in L2: 25%–35%. 40,000 readers, 20,000 can write in K’iche’. Radio. Videos. Dictionary. Grammar. Bible: 1995. Agency: Academy of Mayan Languages.
Latin script [Latn].
Traditional religion, Christian.
OLAC resources in and about K’iche’