- The
Piaroa people,
known among themselves as the Huottüja or De'aruhua, are a
South American indigenous ethnic group of the
middle Orinoco Basin in present-day...
-
Piaroa (also
called Guagua ~
Kuakua ~ Quaqua,
Adole ~ Ature, Wo’tiheh) is an
indigenous language of
Colombia and Venezuela,
native to the Huottüja people...
- The
Piaroa–Saliban, also
known as
Saliban (in spanish : Sálivan), are a
small proposed language family of the
middle Orinoco Basin,
which forms an independent...
- nine species:
Piaroa bacata Moreno-González, Delgado-Santa & Armas, 2014 –
Colombia Piaroa bijagua Armas & Víques, 2009 –
Costa Rica
Piaroa escalerete Moreno-González...
- Maco, Mako, Maku, Makú, Sáliba-Maco, and Maco-
Piaroa, the
latter also for the
combination of Wirö and
Piaroa. Rosés Labrada,
Jorge E. (2015). The Mako language:...
- been made to link Hodï with the
nearby Piaroa–Saliban languages. A
recent proposal classifies Hodï and (
Piaroa–)Saliban as the
branches of a
single Jodï–Saliban...
- the Huottuja, or
Piaroa, who get
their blowguns from the
Yekuana or Maquiritares; the Maquiritare, who get
their curare from the
Piaroa; and the Pemones...
- as the
ceremonial practice using it by
South American tribes.
Cuiva and
Piaroa people of
Orinocoan descent commonly consume Cohoba. As a part of important...
- in the
state of
Apure and the
state of Amazon.
Kuiva (440). Sáliva (36)
Piaroa (13,000)
Yeral (few;
nearly extinct)
These languages are
spoken by groups...
-
magical song: for example,
eshuva for the
Huachipaire people, meye for the
Piaroa,
mariri for the Kokama, or rao bewá for the Shipibo. The word
icaro is believed...