Yeꞌkuana language

Yeꞌkuana
Maquiritari, Dekwana
Yeꞌkuana
Pronunciation[jeʔkwana]
Native toVenezuela
EthnicityYeꞌkuana
Native speakers
(6,000 cited 2000 – 2001 census)
Cariban
  • Guianan Carib
    • Yeꞌkuana
Dialects
Language codes
ISO 639-3mch
Glottologmaqu1238
ELPYekuana

Yekuana (Yeꞌkuana: [jeʔkwana]), also known as Maquiritari, Dekwana, Yekwana, Yecuana, Yekuana, Cunuana, Kunuhana, Decuana, Dekwana Carib, Pawana, Maquiritai, Maquiritare, Maiongong, or Soto is the language of the Yeꞌkuana people of Venezuela and Brazil. It is a Cariban language. It is spoken by approximately 5,900 people (c. 2001) around the border of northwestern Brazilian state of Roraima and Venezuela – the majority (about 5,500) in Venezuela. At the time of the 2001 Venezuelan census, there were at 6,523 Yekuana living in Venezuela. Given the unequal distribution of the Yekuana across two South American countries, Ethnologue lists two different vitality ratings for Yekuana: in Venezuela it is listed as Vigorous (6a), while in Brazil it is classified Moribund (8a) on the Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale (GIDS).