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Chocoan dialect continuum of Colombia and Panama From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Emberá (also known as Chocó) is a dialect continuum spoken by 100,000 people in northwestern Colombia and southeastern Panama. It belongs to the Choco language family.
Emberá | |
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Chocó | |
Geographic distribution | Colombia & Panama |
Ethnicity | Emberá people |
Native speakers | (undated figure of 100,000[citation needed]) |
Linguistic classification | Chocoan
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Subdivisions |
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Language codes | |
Glottolog | embe1258 |
Embera, Emperã, Empena, Eberã, Epena, etc. is the Embera word for 'human being' or 'man' and is used as the autonym by all speakers of varieties of Embera (though not by the related Wounaan). It is also sometimes used to refer to other indigenous people who are not of Emberá ethnicity.
Emberá is usually divided into at least two major groupings:
Each has a few regional varieties. These varieties are sometimes considered dialects but are actually distinct languages. The Archive of the Indigenous Languages of Latin America lists them as follows, along with alleged sub-varieties which may be places, extinct groups, or misspellings:
Ethnologue (2005, 2009) treats Tadó (*) as a separate language. A case can be made for classifying Baudó in the Northern Embera group. It has many features of both groups and is partially intelligible with the neighboring Northern Embera dialect as well as with Epena.
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