Wapishana language
Wapishana is an Arawakan language of Guyana and Brazil. It is spoken by over 13,000 people on both sides of the Guyana-Brazil border.
In Brazil the highest concentration of Wapishana speakers are in the municipalities of Cantá and Bonfim, the Serra da Lua region, where it has been recognized as an official language since 2014.
External pressures have diminished the use of Wapishana among younger generations, and it was not until 1987 that Wapishana was used as the teaching language in Indigenous schools of the language community. In 2009, Roraima Federal University created an extension program for learning Wapishana. In Guyana, there are organizations for language preservation, such as Wapichan Wadauniinao Ati'o.
Classification
Kaufman considered Wapishana, Atorada, and Mapidian to be dialects. separates Mawayana/Mapidian/Mawakwa from Wapishana, and she includes them in a Rio Branco branch. Ethnologue notes that Atorada has 50% lexical similarity with Wapishana and 20% with Mapidian, and that Wapishana and Mapidian share 10%. Ramirez also considers Atorai to be a dialect of Wapishana.Wapishana and Pemon, a Cariban language, have borrowed heavily from each other due to intensive mutual contact.
Phonology
Consonants
- Consonants /b ɖ ʐ/ in final position are heard as voiceless .