Siriano

Siriano (also called "Selea" or "Sürá") are a Tucanoan people indigenous to Colombia and Brazil. Their total population is estimated at 750, with most living in Colombia. Their exogamous culture means that, glossologically, speakers are identified by the first language of their father.[1] The Siriano language is Tucanoan.

Notes

gollark: A bunch of devices say stuff like "basically working! note: no battery, no charging" which is... no.
gollark: postmarketOS *looks* neat, but it does not seem production-ready.
gollark: If you go to some work you can run LineageOS or something with microG, and thus... not deal with the Google issue.
gollark: Well, I run android without google services, so meh.
gollark: Oh yes, those are quite bad.

References

  • Ibáñez Fonseca, Rodrigo (1972) Los Siriano. Bogotá: University of the Andes.
  • Nagler, Christine, and Beverly Brandrup (1979) "Fonología del Siriano"; Sistemas fonológicos de idiomas colombianos IV: 101-126. ILV. Lomalinda: Editorial Townsend.
  • Ojeda, Elvira; Sussy Orozco, and Ruth Monterroso (1984) "Los Sirianos"; Ellis de Walter, Leah B. and Linda Criswell (eds.) Estudiemos las culturas indígenas de Colombia: 170-171. ILV. Lomalinda: Editorial Townsend.



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