-
Puquina (or ****na) is an
extinct language once
spoken by a
native ethnic group in the
region surrounding Lake
Titicaca (Peru and Bolivia) and in the...
-
Puquina (or ****na) is a small, ****tive
language family,
often portra**** as a
language isolate,
which consists of the
extinct Puquina language and Kallawaya...
- The word inti is not of
Quechua origin but a
loanword from
Puquina.
Borrowing from
Puquina explains why
historically unrelated languages such as Quechua...
- Its
origins are in
Mapuche tradition. The word
kalku is a
borrowing from
Puquina language Its
adoption by
Mapuches fits into a
pattern of
parallels in the...
-
Baldoceda Espinoza, Ana (2016). "Observaciones de
palabras aimaras,
quechuas y
puquinas en el
Diccionario de la
lengua española de la Real
Academia Española de...
- had no
written language.
Heggarty and Beresford-Jones
suggest that the
Puquina language is most
likely to have been the
language of Tiwanaku. The dating...
- Mojeño-Ignaciano, Mojeño-Trinitario, Moré, Mosetén, Movima, Pacawara,
Puquina, Quechua, Sirionó, Tacana, Tapieté, Toromona, Uru-Chipaya, Weenhayek, Yaminawa...
-
countries of Bolivia, Peru,
Chile and Argentina. They used the
Aymara and
Puquina languages.
During pre-colonial
times these peoples were not
known as Aymara...
-
distinguished these ethnic groups and
identified the
Aymaras as Qolla, the
Puquinas as
Puquina Qolla and the Uros as Uru Qolla.
Around 1000, the
civilisation centred...
-
structures called chullpas, are the
vestiges of the
Qulla people, most
likely a
Puquina-speaking people,
conquered by the Inca
Empire in the 15th century. The...