- The
Wauja or
Waura (
Waurá: Waujá; Portuguese: Uaurás) are an
indigenous people of Brazil.
Their language,
Waurá, is an
Arawakan language. They live in...
-
Waurá (Wauja) is an
Arawakan language spoken in the
Xingu Indigenous Park of
Brazil by the Waujá people. It is "partially intelligible" with Mehináku...
-
Amazonian Arawak =
Inland Maipuran,
Central Maipurean = Pareci–Xingu = Paresí–
Waurá =
Central Maipuran, Piro = Purus,
Campa = Pre-Andean
Maipurean = Pre-Andine...
- The Pareci–Xingu languages, also
known as Paresi–
Waura or
Central Maipurean, are
Maipurean /
Arawakan languages of the
Bolivian and
western Brazilian...
- used as consistently.
Evidence of the
rising river is seen in a
meeting of
Waurá elders about the year 2005, when
turtles failed to
hatch because the river...
- in the
southern part of the park (Upper Xingu) are:
Arawakan languages Waurá Mehinaku Yawalapiti Cariban languages Kuikuro Matipu Nahukwa Kalapalo Tupian...
-
Sutti Ayama Illela Rumji T. Bako
Wamako Dingyadi Bodinga Chilgari Shunni Waura Gada
Kurawa Sabon Birni Souloulou Yerimawa Makamawa Gauro Goronyo Shinaka...
- ships:
Tsushima Maru (p****enger /
cargo vessel)
Kazuura Maru (listed as
Waura Maru in some sources, ****umed to be a
cargo vessel) Gyōkū Maru (cargo vessel)...
- the
Xingu Indigenous Park of Brazil. One dialect,
Waurá-kumá, is "somewhat intelligible" with
Waurá due to
influence from this language. Mehináku features...
-
allowing fluid-S marking, Paraguay) Many
Arawakan languages, including:
Waurá (split-S,
spoken in Brazil)
Baniwa do Içana (fluid-S;
upper Rio Negro, Brazil)...