qvz ISO 639

Quichua, Northern Pastaza

  • Geography

    EC Pastaza province: eastern jungle along Bobonaza and Conambo rivers.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Ecuador

qvz
Alama, Bobonaza Quichua, Canelos Quichua, Pastaza Quichua, Quichua del Oriente, Sarayacu Quichua
8,000 in Ecuador (2007), decreasing. Total Quichua in Ecuador: 408,000 (Crevels 2012). 300 monolinguals. Total users in all countries: 10,000.
Pastaza province: eastern jungle along Bobonaza and Conambo rivers.
Ecuador, Peru
6b (Threatened).
Quechuan, Peripheral Quechua, Chinchay, Northern Chinchay
Tigre Quechua. A member of macrolanguage Quechua [que].
SOV.
Home, community, religion. Some of all ages. Negative attitudes. Most also use Spanish [spa]. Used as L2 by Achuar-Shiwiar [acu], Waorani [auc], Záparo [zro].
Literacy rate in L1: 15%. Literacy rate in L2: 40% in Spanish [spa]. Any teaching done in Quichua uses Unified Quichua rather than the L1. NT: 1992–2009.
Latin script [Latn].
Distinct from Southern Pastaza Quechua [qup] of Peru. Spanish [spa] is used for education. Traditional religion, Christian.
OLAC resources in and about Quichua, Northern Pastaza
Quichua, Northern Pastaza
2,000 in Peru.
Loreto region: Alamos, Tigre river.
6b (Threatened)
Distinct from Southern Pastaza Quechua [qup].
View other languages of Peru