Trió Language (tri)

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Also Known As: Tirió,Trió,Tiriyó


Description:

  The Tiriyó language is spoken by the Tiriyó (also known as Trio, autodenomination tarëno), approximately 2,000 people living in several villages on both sides of the Brazil-Suriname border in Northern Amazonia. It is a relatively healthy language, learned by all children as their mother tongue and actively used in all areas of life by its speakers. Most of the Tiriyó (there are no precise numbers, but impressionistic observation would suggest more than half) are monolingual speakers. Of course, the long-term survival of their language, as is the case for almost all native South American languages, remains an open question. Tiriyó has been classified as belonging to the Taranoan group of the Guianan sub-branch of Cariban, together with Karihona (Carijona), in Colombia, and Akuriyó, in Suriname, the former with a few, and the latter with apparently no, speakers left.

There seem to be two main dialects in the Tiriyó-speaking area, called by Jones (1972) Eastern or Tapanahoni basin, and Western or Sipaliwini basin dialects, and by Meira (2000, to appear) K-Tiriyó and H-Tiriyó. The main difference thus far reported is phonological: the different realization of what were (historically)..... full article at Wikipedia

Location of Trió Language Speakers

http://llmap.org/languages/tri/static_map.png?width=400&height=300&kilroywashere=.png

Overview

Main Country: Suriname
Spoken In:

Regions: Americas

ISO 639-3 Code: tri

Classification Taxonomy

All Languages

  Carib Group

    Northern Carib Group

      East-West Guiana Group

        Wayana-Trio Group

          Trió Language