Puyuma language
| Puyuma | |
|---|---|
| Pinuyumayan | |
| Native to | Taiwan | 
| Ethnicity | Puyuma people | 
| Native speakers | 8,500 (2002) | 
| Austronesian
 
 | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | pyu | 
| Glottolog | puyu1239 | 
| ELP | Puyuma | 
| Linguasphere | 30-JAA-a | 
| (red) Puyuma | |
| Puyuma is classified as Vulnerable by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger | |
The Puyuma language or Pinuyumayan (Chinese: 卑南語; pinyin: Bēinányǔ), is the language of the Puyuma, an indigenous people of Taiwan. It is a divergent Formosan language of the Austronesian family. Most speakers are older adults.
Puyuma is one of the more divergent of the Austronesian languages and falls outside reconstructions of Proto-Austronesian.