Languages of Argentina


Spanish is the language that is predominantly understood and spoken as a first or second language by nearly all of the population of Argentina. According to the latest estimations, the population is currently greater than 45 million.
English is another important language in Argentina and is obligatory in primary school instruction in various provinces. Argentina is the only Latin American country characterized as "high aptitude" in English, being placed 15th globally in the year 2015, according to a report from the English Aptitude Index. In 2017, Argentina fell ten places from its best position and fell to 25th place, though it continues to be the second highest ranked Ibero-American, after Portugal.
Guarani and Quechua are other important languages in Argentina with 200,000 speakers and 65,000 speakers respectively.
Fifteen Indigenous American languages currently exist and five others existed in different regions. The vernacular Indigenous American languages are spoken by very few people. In addition there is Lunfardo, a slang or a type of pidgin with original words from many languages, among these languages are ones from the Italian Peninsula, such as Piedmontese, Ligurian, and others like Italian, Portuguese, etc., and have been seen in the Río de la Plata area since at least 1880. There is also Portuñol, a pidgin of Portuguese and Spanish spoken since approximately 1960 in the areas of Argentina that border Brazil.
Another native language is Argentine Sign Language, which is signed by deaf communities. It emerged in 1885.
After the above-mentioned languages German follows. Multitude of Eurasian and immigrant languages are spoken in their respective ethnic communities throughout the country; these are predominantly namely: European:Albanian, Armenian, Asturian, Basque, Belarusian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Serbo-Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, Galician, Greek, Hungarian, Irish, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Norwegian, Occitan, Polish, Portuguese, Romani, Romanian, Russian, Slovene, Swedish, Ukrainian, Welsh, and Yiddish; Asian: Arabic, Chinese, Hebrew, Japanese, Korean, Turkish. Most of these languages have, with the exception of Chinese and Plautdietsch, very few speakers and are usually only spoken in family environments.

Official language

The Republic of Argentina has not established, legally, an official language; however, Spanish has been utilized since the founding of the Argentine state by the administration of the Republic and is used in education in all public establishments, so much so that in basic and secondary levels there is a mandatory subject of Spanish. Since 1952, The Argentine Academy of Letters, which was founded in 1931, has regularly collaborated with The Royal Spanish Academy to register local variants.
Even though the Constitution establishes the jurisdiction of the National Congress "to recognize the ethnic and cultural pre-existence of indigenous peoples of Argentina", the native languages have not been recognized as official, except in the provinces of Chaco and Corrientes.
The most prevalent dialect in Argentina is Rioplatense, whose speakers are located primarily in the basin of the Río de la Plata. There is also Cuyo Spanish and Cordobés Spanish. In the north, Andean Spanish is spoken and in the northeast there is a great influence from Paraguayan Spanish.
Argentina is one of several Spanish-speaking countries that almost universally use what is known as voseo—the use of the pronoun vos instead of as well as its corresponding verb forms.
A phonetic study conducted by the Laboratory for Sensory Investigations of and the University of Toronto showed that the intonation Porteño Spanish is unlike that of other Spanish varieties, and suggested that it may be a result of convergence with Italian. Italian immigration influenced Lunfardo, the slang spoken in the Río de la Plata region, permeating the vernacular vocabulary of other regions as well.
As in other large countries, the accents vary depending on geographical location. Extreme differences in pronunciation can be heard within Argentina. One notable pronunciation difference found in Argentina is the "sh" sounding y and ll. In most Spanish speaking countries the letters y and ll are pronounced somewhat like the "y" in yo-yo, however in most parts of Argentina they are pronounced like "sh" in English or like "zh".
In many of the central and north-eastern areas of the country, the trilled /r/ takes on the same sound as the and . For Example, "Río Segundo" sounds like "Zhio Segundo" and "Corrientes" sounds like "Cozhientes".
The ISO639 code for Argentine Spanish is "es-AR".

Classification

The Indo-European languages spoken in Argentina by stable communities fall into five branches: Romance, West Germanic, Celtic languages, and Central Indo-Aryan.
On the other hand, the indigenous languages of Argentina are very diverse and fall into different linguistic families...
: extinct language

Living languages

In addition to Spanish, the following living languages are registered in Argentina with local growth:

Other European languages

Sign language

Argentine Sign Language is understood by around two million deaf people of Argentina, their instructors, descendants, and others. There are different regional variants.

Quechuan languages

Southern Quechua comes from the family of Quechuan languages. There are seven variations present that are marked by their geographical origin, including:
  • South Bolivian Quechua is spoken by inhabitants of Puna and their descendants. This same variety is spoken in all of Jujuy, Salta, and Tucumán; after Spanish it is the second most widespread language of the country and the most important Indigenous language of the Americas. In 2004, there were speakers.
  • Santiagueño Quechua: which is different from Bolivian Quechua, though it has an 81 percent lexical similarity, is spoken by 100,000 people, according to data from Censabella, even though other estimations raise the figure to 140,000 or 160,000 speakers in the Santiago del Estero Province, southeast of the Salta Province and Buenos Aires. A department for its study and conservation exists in the National University of Santiago del Estero. The smallest calculation of talks about a minimum of 60,000 speakers in 2000. Its speakers are currently composed of a Creoyle population that does not self-recognize as indigenous.

Tupi-Guarani languages

In the provinces of Corrientes, Misiones, Chaco, Formosa, Entre Ríos, and Buenos Aires dialects of Argentine Guarani are spoken or known by nearly one million people, including Paraguayan immigrants that speak Paraguayan Guarani or Jopara. In Corrientes, the Argentine Guarani dialect was decreed co-official in 2004 and made obligatory in educational instruction and the government.
  • Chiripa is a language family of Tupi-Guarani, subgroup I. There are a few speakers in the Misiones Province and among Paraguayan immigrants.
  • Mbyá is from the Tupi-Guarani family, subgroup I. It has a 75 percent lexical similarity with Paraguayan Guarani. In 2012, some speakers were counted in the Misiones Province.
  • Eastern Bolivian Guarani is also from the Tupi-Guarani family, subgroup I. Some 15,000 speakers in the provinces of Salta and Formosa.
  • or Argentine Guarani pertains to the Tupi-Guarani family. It is spoken by nearly 70 percent of the population with an origin from the Corrientes Province. The Correntino government decreed in 2004 the co-officiality of the Guarani language and its obligatory use in teaching and government, even though it still has not been regulated.
  • Kaiwá, called pai tavyterá in Paraguay, is from the Tupi-Guarani family, subgroup I. It is spoken by no more than 510 people in Misiones Province.
  • Tapieté from the Tupi-Guarani family, subgroup I, is spoken by some 100 speakers of a village near Tartagal, Salta.
  • Missionary Guarani Jesuit was an old variety of Guarani spoken by Jesuit Missionaries became extinct around 1800.

Mapuche

The Mapuche language is an isolated language that had approximately speakers in the provinces of Neuquén, Río Negro, Chubut, and Santa Cruz in 2004, with an ethnic population of people.

Aymara

Central Aymara is a language of the Aymaran group, spoken by inhabitants of Jujuy, of the North of Salta, besides the immigrants of Puna and of Peru.

Mataco-Guaicuru languages

From the Mataco or Mataguyao group:
  • Iyojwa'ja Chorote, Choroti, Yofuaha or Eklenjuy is from the Mataco-Guaicuru family and is a distinct language from Chorote Iyo'wujwa. It was spoken in 2007 by some 800 people in the Salta Province.
  • Chorote iyo'wujwa, Ch'orti', Manjuy, Majui is from the Mataco-Guaicuru family. There were some 1,500 speakers accounted for in 2007, 50 percent of which were monolingual.
  • Nivaclé is from the Mataco-Guaicuru family, It has about 200 speakers in the Northeast of the Formosa Province. The term chulupí and similar terms are pejoratives and are like the word guaycurú which comes from the Guarani invaders.
  • Wichí Lhamtés Güisnay is from the Mataco-Guaicuru family and is spoken by some people in the Pilcomayo River area, Formosa. The term mataco used to name the languages and towns of the Wichí people is a pejorative and comes from the invaders that were speakers of Runasimi (Quechua).
  • Wichí Lhamtés Vejoz is from the Mataco-Guaicuru family. There are calculated to be speakers distributed throughout the Chaco, Formosa, and Salta Provinces. Its main area of influence, in general, is found at the west of the area of the Toba people, along the superior course of the Pilcomayo River. It is unintelligible with other languages of Gran Chaco, and is also spoken in Bolivia.
From the Guaicuru group:
  • Mocoví is from the Mataco-Guaicuru family. In 2012, there were some speakers in Formosa, in the south of Chaco and the Northeast of the Santa Fe Province.
  • Pilagá is from the Mataco-Guaicuru family and is spoken by some 2,000 to 5,000 people in the basins of the Pilcomayo and Bermejo rivers, providences Formosa and Chaco. In 2004, it was spoken by 4,000 people.
  • Qom is also from the Mataco-Guaicuru family. Spoken in the year 2006 by 40,000 to 60,000 people in the East of Formosa and Chaco. In 2000 it was spoken by 21,410 indigenous people.

Extinct languages

In addition to surviving indigenous languages, before the contact with Europeans and during some time during the Colonization of the Americas in Argentina they spoke the following languages, that are currently extinct: