Languages of Ecuador

Languages of Ecuador
Sign in Samborondón in Spanish, English and Kichwa
OfficialSpanish;
Spanish, Kichwa and Shuar for intercultural relations;
Remaining indigenous languages are official where they are spoken[1]
MainSpanish
IndigenousAchuar–Shiwiar, Awa–Cuaiquer, Cha'palaachi, Cofán, Colorado, Emberá languages, Quechua languages, Secoya, Shuar, Siona, Tetete, Waorani, Záparo
VernacularEcuadorian Spanish, Media Lengua, Andean Spanish, Equatorial Spanish
ForeignEnglish
SignedEcuadorian Sign Language
Keyboard layout
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Spanish is the official and most commonly spoken language in Ecuador. Northern Quechua and other pre-colonial American languages were spoken by 2,300,000 in the past (Adelaar 1991). Ethnologue lists 24 languages of Ecuador:[2]

References

  1. ^ Constitution of Ecuador 2008, Chapter One, Article 1, Wikisource
  2. ^ "Ecuador".
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Languages of Ecuador
Official languages
Indigenous languages
Spanish varieties
Sign languages
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Indigenous language families and isolates of South America
(based on Campbell 2012 classification)
Language families
and isolates
Je–Tupi–Carib
Macro-Jê
Eastern Brazil
Orinoco (Venezuela)
? Duho
Andes (Colombia and Venezuela)
Amazon (Colombia, JapuráVaupés area)
Pacific coast (Colombia and Ecuador)
Pacific coast (Peru)
Amazon (Peru)
Amazon (west-central Brazil)
Mamoré–Guaporé
Andes (Peru, Bolivia, and Chile)
Chaco–Pampas
Far South (Chile)
Proposed groupings
Linguistic areas
Countries
Lists
Authority control databases: National Edit this at Wikidata
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