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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Central Quechua
Quechua I
Qichwa
Native toPeru
RegionAndes
EthnicityQuechua,
Native speakers
(750 000 cited 1987–2002)[1]
Quechuan
  • Central Quechua
Dialects
Latin script
Language codes
ISO 639-3Variously:
qwa – Corongo Quechua
qwh – Huaylas Quechua
qws – Northern Conchucos Quechua
qxo – Southern Conchucos Quechua
qvn – Huamalies and North of 2 de mayo Quechua
qvw – Huaylla Quechua
qxw – Jauja Quechua
qxn – Sihuas Quechua
qxa – Chiquián Quechua
qul – Cajatambo Quechua
qvm – Margos Yarowilca Lauricocha Quechua
qub – Huallaga Quechua
qxh – Panao Quechua
qur – Chawpi waranqa Quechua
qxt – Santa Ana de Tusi Quechua
qva – Ambo Quechua
qux – Yauyos Quechua
qxc – Chincha Quechua
Glottologquec1389
Distribution of Quechua sub-groups. Southern Quechua is shown in blue.

Central Quechua (Quechua: Chawpi qichwa, Spanish: quechua central), or simply Quechua (Qichwa), is the most widely spoken of the major regional groupings of mutually intelligible dialects within the Quechua language family, with about 750 000 speakers. The term Cental Quechua refers to the Quechuan varieties spoken in regions of the central Andes in central Peru. It includes the Quechua varieties spoken in the regions of Ancash, Huánuco and Puno in Peru, The most widely spoken varieties are Huaylas, Conchucos, and Huanca In the traditional classification of the Quechua language family by Alfredo Torero, Central Quechua is equivalent to Torero's 'Quechua I' (or just 'QI'). It thus stands in contrast to its many sister varieties within the wider Quechuan family that are spoken in areas south of the Huancayo-Huancavelica line: Southern Quechua (Torero's QIIc) spoken from Huancayo southwards to the Ayacucho Region; North Peruvian Quechua around Cajamarca and Incahuasi (Torero's IIa); and Kichwa (part of Torero's Quechua IIb).

Standard Quechua[edit]

The Peruvian Ministery of Education has devised a standard orthography intended to be viable for all the different regional forms of Quechua that fall under the umbrella term Central Quechua. It is a compromise of conservative features in the pronunciations of the various regions that speak forms of Central Quechua. It has been accepted by many institutions in Peru and is also used on Wikipedia Quechua pages, and by Microsoft in its translations of software into Quechua.

Here are some examples of regional spellings different from the standard orthography:

Ayacucho Cuzco Standard Translation
upyay uhay upyay "to drink"
llamkay llank'ay llamk'ay "to work"
ñuqanchik nuqanchis ñuqanchik "we (inclusive)"
-chka- -sha- -chka- (progressive suffix)
punchaw p'unchay p'unchaw "day"

In Bolivia, the same standard is used except for "j", which is used instead of "h" for the sound [h] (like in Spanish).

Sound examples for words pata, phata p'ata.

The following letters are used for the inherited Quechua vocabulary and for loanwords from Aymara:
a, ch, chh, ch', h, i, k, kh, k', l, ll, m, n, ñ, p, ph, p', q, qh, q', r, s, t, th, t', u, w, y.

Instead of "sh" (appearing in the northern and central Quechua varieties), "s" is used.
Instead of "ĉ" (appearing in the Quechua varieties of Junín, Cajamarca, and Lambayeque), "ch" is used.

The following letters are used in loanwords from Spanish and other languages (not from Aymara):
b, d, e, f, g, o.

The letters e and o are not used for native Quechua words because the corresponding sounds are simply allophones of i and u that appear predictably next to q, qh, and q'. This rule applies to the official Quechua orthography for all varieties. Thus, the spellings ⟨qu⟩ and ⟨qi⟩ are pronounced [qo] and [qe].

The letters appear, however, in proper names or words adopted directly from Spanish:
c, v, x, z; j (in Peru; in Bolivia, it is used instead of h).

  1. ^ Corongo Quechua at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
    Huaylas Quechua at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
    Northern Conchucos Quechua at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
    Southern Conchucos Quechua at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
    Huamalies and North of 2 de mayo Quechua at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
    Huaylla Quechua at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
    (Additional references under 'Language codes' in the information box)