(Redirected from Kimda language )
Extinct Jê language of Brazil
Ingain is an extinct Jê language of Brazil , closely related to the Southern Jê languages Kaingáng and Laklãnõ (Xokléng) . Kimdá may have been a dialect. Ingain was spoken along the middle Paraná River , from the Iguatemi River in the north to the Arroyo Yabebiry in the south.
Related "South Kaingáng" languages were:
Guayana / Wayana / Gualachí / Guanhanan - extinct language once spoken between the Uruguay River and Paraná River , Rio Grande do Sul , Brazil
Amhó or Ivitorocái - extinct language from Riacho Ivitoracái, Paraguay. Listed as separate from the Ingain cluster by Mason (1950).
See also
References
Nikulin, Andrey. 2020. Proto-Macro-Jê: um estudo reconstrutivo . Doctoral dissertation, University of Brasília.
Loukotka, Čestmír (1968). Classification of South American Indian languages . Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center.
Mason, John Alden (1950). "The languages of South America". In Steward, Julian (ed.). Handbook of South American Indians . Vol. 6. Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office: Smithsonian Institution , Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 143. pp. 157–317.
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Ingain language
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