Jaqaru language

Jaqaru
Tupe
Haq'aru
Native toPeru
Ethnicity2,000 Jaqaru and Kawki (2000)[1]
Native speakers
740 (2004)[1]
Aymaran
  • Jaqaru
Dialects
  • Kawki
Language codes
ISO 639-3jqr
Glottologtupe1234
ELPJaqaru
Distribution of Jaqaru (red)

Jaqaru (Haq'aru) is a language of the Aymaran family.[2] It is also known as Jaqi and Aru. It is spoken in the districts of Tupe and Catahuasi in Yauyos Province, Lima Region, Peru. Most of the 2000 ethnic Jaqaru have migrated to Lima.

Kawki, a divergent dialect, is spoken in the nearby communities of Cachuy, Canchán, Caipán and Chavín by a few elderly individuals (9 surviving in early 2005). Hardman[citation needed] has noted that while Jaqaru and Kawki share a degree of mutual intelligibility, speakers of one were unable to understand tape recordings of the other, and in a few cases of marriage between Kawki and Jaqaru speakers, the home language was Spanish. (However, the home language of most Jaqaru and Kawki is now Spanish.) Historical analysis shows that the two languages were out of contact for a period. The name Tupe is used for Jaqaru and Kawki together.

There exist clear differences between Jaqaru and Kawki in regard to morphology. Jaqaru has ten verb persons, whereas Kawki has only nine (due to a case of homophony wherein Kawki maintained the semantic distinction between two different person markers, but lost the form distinction between the two). Additionally, regressive vowel harmony is present throughout the verb person system in Jaqaru, but does not appear in Kawki. Phonologically, Kawki is differentiated from Jaqaru in its vowel system. Jaqaru contains six vowels- three of regular length and three short, whereas Kawki has only the three regular-length vowels.

  1. ^ a b Jaqaru at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ "Jaqaru".