Kagwahiva language
| Kawahíva | |
|---|---|
| Tupi–Guarani subgroup VI | |
| Kawahib | |
| Native to | Brazil | 
| Region | Mato Grosso and Rondônia | 
| Ethnicity | (see varieties below) | 
| Native speakers | (870 cited 2000–2006) | 
| Tupian
 
 | |
| Dialects | 
 | 
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | Variously: pah– Tenharim–Parintintínurz– Uru-eu-wau-waukuq– Karipuná (confuses Kawahib with Jau-Navo)jua– Júmaxmo– Morerebitkf– ? Tukumanféd (unattested)wir– Wirafédpaf– Paranawátadw– Amondawaapi– Apiacá | 
| Glottolog | tupi1280 | 
Kawahíva (Kawahíb, Kagwahib) is a Tupi–Guarani dialect cluster of Brazil. The major variety is Tenharim.
The Tenharim (self-designation, Pyri 'near, together'), Parintintín, Jiahúi, Amondawa, Karipúna (not to be confused with neither the Panoan group, nor the Carib-based creole spoken in the state of Amapá, which all have the same name), Uru-eu-wau-wau (self-designation, Jupaú), Júma, Piripkúra, and Capivarí all call themselves Kawahíva. Their speech is mutually intelligible, and also similar with other languages now extinct. The closest Tupí-Guaraní language seems to be Apiaká, spoken in Mato Grosso.