Jump to content

Intercontinental Dictionary Series

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Sagotreespirit (talk | contribs) at 20:09, 23 June 2022 (IDS). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Intercontinental Dictionary Series (commonly abbreviated as IDS) is a large database of topical vocabulary lists in various world languages. The general editor of the database is Bernard Comrie of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig. Mary Ritchie Key of the University of California, Irvine is the founding editor. The database has an especially large selection of indigenous South American languages and Northeast Caucasian languages.

The Intercontinental Dictionary Series' advanced browsing function allows users to make custom tables which compare languages in side-by-side columns.

Below are the languages that are currently included in the Intercontinental Dictionary Series. The languages are grouped by language families, some of which are still hypothetical.

It is part of the Cross-Linguistic Linked Data project hosted by the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.[1]

Amerindian

North America

  1. Tlingit
  2. Haida
  3. Tsimshian
  4. Wakashan
    1. Nootka
  5. Salishan
    1. Bella Coola
    2. Chehalis
  6. Hokan?
    1. Karok
    2. Seri
  7. Zuni
  8. Nahuatl (Sierra de Zacapoaxtla, Puebla)
  9. Chatino, Zacatepec

Northern South America

  1. Chocoan
    1. Emberá
      1. Embera – Colombia
      2. Epena – Colombia
  2. Chibchan
    1. Muisca – Colombia
    2. Barí (Tairona) – Colombia / Venezuela
  3. Cofán – Colombia / Ecuador
  4. Barbacoan
    1. Cayapa (Cha'palaachi) – Ecuador
    2. Colorado (Tsafiki) – Ecuador
  5. Páez – Colombia
  6. Yanomaman
    1. Yanomami
    2. Ninam
  7. Yaruro – Venezuela
  8. Tucanoan
    1. Siona – Ecuador
    2. Tuyuca – Colombia / Brazil
  9. Jivaroan
    1. Aguaruna – Peru / Ecuador
  10. Waorani (Huaorani) – Ecuador

Amazonia

  1. Arawakan
    1. Goajiro (Wayuu) – Colombia
    2. Wapishana – Guyana / Brazil
    3. Yavitero – Venezuela (extinct)
    4. Mashco Piro (Yine) – Peru / Brazil
    5. Waurá – Brazil
    6. Baure – Bolivia
    7. Moxos – Bolivia
      1. Ignaciano – Bolivia
      2. Trinitario – Bolivia
  2. Macro-Gê
    1. Karajá
      1. Kaingáng
      2. Canela
  3. Tupian
    1. Tupinambá – Brazil
    2. Guaraní – Paraguay
    3. Chiriguano – Bolivia
    4. Aché – Paraguay
    5. Mundurukú – Brazil
    6. Sirionó – Bolivia
    7. Wayampi – French Guiana
  4. Cariban
    1. Carib (De'kwana)
    2. Panare – Venezuela
    3. Macushi – Brazil / Guyana
    4. Wai Wai – Brazil / Guyana
  5. Panoan
    1. Cashibo – Peru
    2. Shipibo-Conibo – Peru
    3. Yaminahua – Peru
    4. Chácobo – Bolivia
    5. Pacahuara – Bolivia
  6. Tacanan
    1. Ese Ejja (Huarayo) – Peru / Bolivia
    2. Tacana – Bolivia
    3. Cavineña – Bolivia
    4. Araona – Bolivia
  7. Catuquina – Acre, Brazil
  8. Puinavean (Nadahup/Makú)
    1. Hup – Brazil / Colombia
    2. Yuwana (Hodï)? – Venezuela
  9. Peba-Yaguan
    1. Yagua – Brazil
  10. Chapacuran
    1. Pacaas Novos – Brazil
  11. Uru-Chipaya
    1. Chipaya – Bolivia
  12. Trumai – Brazil
  13. Aymara
  14. Cayuvava – Bolivia (extinct)
  15. Itonama – Bolivia
  16. Movima – Bolivia

Southern South America

  1. Guaicuruan
    1. Pilagá – Argentina
    2. Toba – Argentina / Paraguay
    3. Mocoví – Argentina
  2. Matacoan
    1. Chorote – Argentina
    2. Maká – Paraguay
    3. Nivaclé – Paraguay
    4. Wichi – Argentina
  3. Zamucoan
    1. Ayoreo – Paraguay / Bolivia
  4. Mascoian
    1. Sanapaná – Paraguay
  5. Moseten
    1. Mosetén (Tsimané) – Bolivia
  6. Chon
    1. Selknam
    2. Tehuelche
  7. Qawasqar
  8. Puelche (Gününa Küne) – Argentina Pampas
  9. Kunza – Chile (extinct)
  10. Mapudungun – Chile / Argentina
  11. Yagán (Yaghan)

Northeast Caucasian

  1. Northeast Caucasian
    1. Nakh
      1. Chechen
    2. Avar–Andic
      1. Avar
      2. Andi
      3. Botlikh
      4. Chamalal
      5. Ghodoberi
      6. Bagvalin (Bagvalal)
      7. Tindi
      8. Karata
      9. Akhvakh
    3. Tsezic
      1. Tsez
      2. Hinukh
      3. Bezhta
      4. Hunzib
      5. Khvarshi
    4. Lak (isolate)
    5. Khinalug (isolate)
    6. Dargi
      1. Dargwa
    7. Lezgic
      1. Archi
      2. Udi
      3. Lezgi
      4. Aghul
      5. Tabasaran
      6. Budukh
      7. Rutul
      8. Tsakhur

Indo-European

  1. Indo-European
    1. Hittite
    2. Tocharian A/B
    3. Armenian (Eastern, Western)
    4. Albanian, Tosk
    5. Greek (Ancient, Modern)
    6. Indo-Iranian
      1. Persian
      2. Avestan
      3. Tats (Judeo-Tat)
      4. Sanskrit
      5. Romani
    7. Celtic
      1. Irish (Old, Modern)
      2. Breton
      3. Welsh
    8. Germanic
      1. Core Germanic
        1. English (Old, Middle, Modern)
        2. German (Old, Middle, Modern)
        3. Yiddish
        4. Dutch
        5. Gothic
      2. Scandinavian
        1. Old Norse
        2. Danish
        3. Swedish
    9. Balto-Slavic
      1. Baltic
        1. Lithuanian
        2. Latvian
        3. Prussian
      2. Slavic
        1. Russian
        2. Old Church Slavonic
        3. Bulgarian
        4. Serbo-Croatian
        5. Polish
        6. Czech
    10. Romance
      1. Latin
      2. Spanish
      3. Portuguese
      4. Catalan
      5. French
      6. Italian
      7. Romanian

Uralic

  1. Uralic
    1. Finnic languages
      1. Finnish
      2. Estonian
    2. Hungarian
    3. Mordvinic languages
      1. Erzya-Mordvin
    4. Komi
    5. Khanty
    6. Udmurt
    7. Mansi
    8. Mari
    9. Samic languages
      1. Northern Sami
    10. Samoyedic
      1. Nenets
      2. Selkup

Tai-Kadai

  1. Tai-Kadai
    1. Kra
      1. Gelao (Qau)
      2. Gelao (Hakei)
      3. Buyang (Langjia)
      4. Buyang (Ecun)
    2. Hlai
      1. Li (Baoting)
    3. Kam-Sui
      1. Lakkja
      2. Mulam
      3. Maonan
      4. Chadong
      5. Kam, Southern
      6. Sui
    4. Tai
      1. Zhuang (Longzhou)
      2. Nung (Fengshan)
      3. Nung (Lazhai)
      4. Nung (Ningbei)
      5. Tai Khuen
      6. Tai Lue
      7. Dehong
      8. Shan
      9. Thai (standard)
      10. Thai (central)
      11. Thai (Khorat)
      12. Thai (Songkhla)

Others

  1. Basque
  2. Elamite
  3. Turkic
    1. Azerbaijan
    2. Nogai
    3. Kumyk
    4. Chulym
  4. Austronesian
    1. Proto Austronesian
    2. Proto Polynesian
      1. Rotuman – Fiji
      2. Tongan
      3. Marquesan
      4. Tuamotuan
      5. Hawaiian
      6. Māori
      7. Rapa Nui
  5. Afro-Asiatic
    1. Semitic
      1. Arabic
      2. Aramaic
    2. Chadic
      1. Hausa
      2. Polci
  6. Nilo-Saharan
    1. Ghulfan
  7. Creoles
    1. Negerhollands (Dutch-based) – U.S. Virgin Islands
    2. Limonese Creole (English-based) – Costa Rica
    3. Lengua (Quechua-based) – Ecuador (mixed)[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Cross-Linguistic Linked Data". Retrieved February 22, 2020.