Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
GLOSSARI - Coggle Diagram
GLOSSARI
Achuar
The Achuares are an American indigenous people belonging to the Jivaroana family such as the Shuar, Shiwiar, Awajun and Wampis (Peru)
Tsa’chila
The original name of this nationality is Tsa´chi, its language is Tsa´fiqui which means true people or human being, previously the communities were dispersed, organized around a chief called Miya, Governor or Pone, chief who was commonly the wise of the place
-
Épera
location: Esmeraldas Province, Eloy Alfaro Canton, Borbón and La Concepción parishes. language: Sia Pedee (Wamuna or Epena), which means "voice of wild cane", and Castilian as a second language. About 50% of the population
The Huaoranís or Waoranis (traditionally called ushiris and avijirias, waodani or sabela, or in a pejorative way auca in the Quecha language) are an Amerindian people who live in the northwest of the Amazon, east of Ecuador
Cañari
The word "cañari" is etymologically believed to come from kan = snake and from ara = macaw. For some linguists it means descendant of the snake and the macaw
The Cofán Nationality calls itself A'i, which in their language means real people. Actually, the word Kofan is a Western term that has no meaning in their language.
Secoya is the name of a river and a stream considered its place of origin. In Paicoca (Sequoia language) the ethnic name is Siekóya pai, which means "people of the striped river"
In the case of our country, the Shiwiar are located to the southeast of the Pastaza province, Pastaza canton, Corrientes River parish
Shuar means in the Shuar language 'human being'. At present, this denominative is much more accepted to refer to the ethnic group and the language that it speaks, in contrast to the Spanish term Jíbaro, considered pejorative by them.
The Siona ethnic group belongs to the Western Tukano linguistic family and is located in the northeast of Ecuador, near Colombia, in the upper part of the Aguarico River and its tributaries, the Eno River and the Shushufindi. Siona means "towards the garden" (sio = garden, na = towards).
The Záparo or Zápara language (also called Kayapwe) is a SOV language that belongs to the Zaparoana family. It is extinct in Ecuador and Peru. The first contacts with the Zápara ethnic group occurred in 1667 (Reeve 1988).
The dialect is the variety of a language that is spoken in a certain territory. Here come particular ways of expressing themselves phonetically and in writing