qus ISO 639

Quichua Autonyms

Quichua, Santiago del Estero

  • Geography

    AR Chaco province; Santiago del Estero province: Figueroa, Moreno, Robles, Sarmiento, Brigadier J. F. Ibarra, San Martín, Silipica, Loreto, Atamisqui, Avellaneda, Salavina, Quebrachos, Mitre, and Aguirre departments; perhaps Buenos Aires and Salta provinces.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Argentina

qus
Santiagueño Quichua
Quichua
60,000 (2000 SIL), decreasing. No monolinguals.
Chaco province; Santiago del Estero province: Figueroa, Moreno, Robles, Sarmiento, Brigadier J. F. Ibarra, San Martín, Silipica, Loreto, Atamisqui, Avellaneda, Salavina, Quebrachos, Mitre, and Aguirre departments; perhaps Buenos Aires and Salta provinces.
Argentina and Chile
6a* (Vigorous).
Quechuan, Peripheral Quechua, Chinchay, Southern Chinchay
None known. Lexical similarity: 81% with Bolivian or other Quechua. A member of macrolanguage Quechua [que].
20 consonants and 5 vowels.
Vigorous. Increased use by media, musical groups. Chair of Quichua in the National University. Positive attitudes. Most also use Spanish [spa].
Radio. Dictionary. Grammar. Bible portions: 1990.
Latin script [Latn].
Christian, traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Quichua, Santiago del Estero