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Vilela language

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Vilela
Native toArgentina
Extinct20 by 1981;[1] gone by 2011[2]
Language codes
ISO 639-3vil
Glottologvile1241
ELPVilela

Vilela (Uakambalelté, Atalalá, Chulupí~Chunupí)[3] is an extinct language last spoken in the Resistencia area of Argentina and in the eastern Chaco near the Paraguayan border. Dialects were Ocol, Chinipi, Sinipi; only Ocol survives. The people call themselves Waqha-umbaβelte 'Waqha speakers'.

The last Vilela people were absorbed into the surrounding Toba people and Spanish-speaking townsfolk.

Dialects

Loukotka (1968) lists the following dialects of Vilela.[4]

Phonology

Vilela appears to have the five vowels /a e i o u/ of Spanish and approximately the following consonants:

m n
b d ɡ ɢ
p t k q ʔ
tʃʼ
f s ʃ x h
ɬ
w l j
r, ɾ

Notes

  1. ^ Vilela language at Ethnologue (16th ed., 2009) Closed access icon
  2. ^ Vilela at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  3. ^ Not to be confused with Niwaklé, which is also called Chulupí~Chunupí.
  4. ^ Loukotka, Čestmír (1968). Classification of South American Indian Languages. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center. pp. 53.

References

  • Lozano, Elena (1970). Textos Vilelas. La Plata: CEILP.
  • Lozano, Elena (1977). Cuentos secretos vilelas: I. La mujer tigre. VICUS Cuadernos. Lingüística, Vol.I: 93-116.
  • Golluscio, Lucia A. and Raoul Zamponi (2019). El vilela del siglo XVIII. Indiana 36. 43-68, A1-A56.