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Cuzco Quechua language

Southern Quechua dialect of Cuzco, Peru From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Cuzco Quechua (Quechua: Qusqu qhichwa simi) is a dialect of Southern Quechua spoken in Cuzco and the Cuzco Region of Peru.

Quick Facts Native to, Native speakers ...

It is the Quechua variety used by the Academia Mayor de la Lengua Quechua in Cuzco, which also prefers the Spanish-based five-vowel alphabet.[2] On the other hand, the official alphabet used by the ministry of education has only three vowels.[3]

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Phonology

There is debate about whether Cuzco Quechua has five /a, e, i, o, u/ or three vowel phonemes: /a, ɪ, ʊ/.[4] While historically Proto-Quechua clearly had just three vowel phonemes /*a, *ɪ, *ʊ/, and although some other Quechua varieties have an increased number of vowels as a result of phonological vowel length emergence or of monophthongization, the current debate about the Cuzco variety seems to be not phonological in matter but just orthographic.[5]

More information Phoneme, IPA Phonetic realizations ...
More information Bilabial, Alveolar ...
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Grammar

Pronouns

More information Northern Quechua, Ancash Quechua ...

Nouns

More information Function, Suffix ...

Adjectives

Verbs

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See also

References

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