-
1 quechua
adj.Quechuan.f. & m.Quechua (person).m.Quechua (idioma).* * *► adjetivo1 Quechua1 (persona) Quechua1 (idioma) Quechua————————1 (idioma) Quechua* * *1.ADJ Quechua, Quechuan2.3.SM (Ling) QuechuaQUECHUA Quechua, the language spoken by the Incas, is the most widely spoken indigenous language in South America, with some 13 million speakers in the Andean region. The first Quechua grammar was compiled by a Spanish missionary in 1560, as part of a linguistic policy intended to aid the process of evangelization. In 1975 Peru made Quechua an official state language. From Quechua come words such as "llama", "condor" and "puma".* * *Iadjetivo QuechuaIImasculino y femenino1) ( persona) Quechuan•• Cultural note:The language of the Incas, Quechua is spoken today by some 13 million people in Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Argentina. Since 1975 it has been an official language in Peru. The Quechua people are one of South America's most important ethnic minorities. Words derived from Quechua include coca, cóndor, pampa, and puma* * *= Quechua.Ex. This book looks at the linguistic history of potato cultivation in the Andes by considering the Quechua and Aymara terminology associated with this crop.* * *Iadjetivo QuechuaIImasculino y femenino1) ( persona) Quechuan•• Cultural note:The language of the Incas, Quechua is spoken today by some 13 million people in Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Argentina. Since 1975 it has been an official language in Peru. The Quechua people are one of South America's most important ethnic minorities. Words derived from Quechua include coca, cóndor, pampa, and puma* * *= Quechua.Ex: This book looks at the linguistic history of potato cultivation in the Andes by considering the Quechua and Aymara terminology associated with this crop.
* * *The language of the Incas, Quechua is spoken today by some 13 million people in Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Argentina. Since 1975 it has been an official language in Peru. The Quechua people are one of South America's most important ethnic minorities. Words derived from Quechua include coca, cóndor, pampa, and puma.Quechuaquechua (↑ quechua 31)1 (persona) Quechuan2* * *
quechua adjetivo
Quechua
■ sustantivo masculino y femenino ( persona) Quechuan
■ sustantivo masculino ( idioma) Quechua
quechua
I adjetivo Quechua
II mf Quechua
III sustantivo masculino (idioma) Quechua
' quechua' also found in these entries:
English:
rusty
* * *quechua, quichua♦ adjQuechuan♦ nmf[persona] Quechua♦ nm[idioma] QuechuaQUECHUAQuechua is an Amerindian language spoken by more than eight million people in the Andean region. In Peru, something between a quarter and a third of the population use Quechua, and the position in Bolivia and Ecuador is similar. It is also spoken in northern Chile and Argentina, and southern Colombia. Quechua was the language of the Inca empire, so the variety spoken in the Inca capital of Cuzco was the most important of its many dialects. The number of speakers declined dramatically in the centuries following the Spanish conquest, but in more recent years there have been official attempts to promote the language. As with the Aztec language Nahuatl, many Quechua words passed into Spanish, and on to many other languages. For example, in English we find “condor”, “jerky” (n, = dried meat) and “quinine”. -
2 quechua
'ketʃuam1) Ketschua-Indianer m2) LING Ketschuasprache fadjetivo————————sustantivo masculino y femenino————————sustantivo masculinoquechuaquechua ['ke6B36F75Cʧ6B36F75Cwa]I adjetivoQuechua-(persona) Quechua masculino y femenino -
3 quechua
• Kechua• Quechua -
4 quechua
1. adj 2. com.кечуа, кичуа ( представитель индейского племени Перу)3. m -
5 quechua
сущ.общ. кечуа м (группа индейских племён) (pl), язык племени кичуа, кичуа (индейское племя, населявшее Перу до испанской колонизации) -
6 quechua
1. adjотнося́щийся к ке́чуа ( одной из народностей района Анд)2. comинде́ец, индиа́нка ке́чуа3. mязы́к ке́чуа -
7 quechua
m вж. quichua. -
8 quechua
1. adj 2. com.кечуа, кичуа (представитель индейского племени Перу)3. m -
9 quechua
quítxua -
10 lenguaje quechua
m.Quechua language, Quechua. -
11 los quechua-hablantes
• osoby mluvící kičujsky -
12 quichua
adj.Quechuan.f. & m.Quechua, member of the Quechan Indians of Peru, Quechuan, Kechua.* * *► adjetivo-nombre masculino,nombre femenino1→ link=quechua quechua* * *1.ADJ Quechua, Quechuan2.3.SM (Ling) Quechua* * *adj/mf* * * -
13 quichua
-
14 aimará
adj.Aymara.f. & m.Aymara, member of the Indian people living around Lake Titicaca in Bolivia and Peru.* * *( pl aimaraes)1.ADJ SMF Aymara, Aymara Indian2.SM (Ling) Aymara* * *Iadjetivo AymaraIImasculino y femenino Aymara Indian•• Cultural note:A large Indian ethnic group living on the harsh Titicaca plateau in the Andes in southern Peru and northern Bolivia, who speak Aymara. They were conquered by the Incas, then by the Spaniards. Inca influence remains in religious beliefs, folklore, food, and art. The Aymara are mostly farmers and keep herds of llamas* * *= Aymara.Ex. This book looks at the linguistic history of potato cultivation in the Andes by considering the Quechua and Aymara terminology associated with this crop.* * *Iadjetivo AymaraIImasculino y femenino Aymara Indian•• Cultural note:A large Indian ethnic group living on the harsh Titicaca plateau in the Andes in southern Peru and northern Bolivia, who speak Aymara. They were conquered by the Incas, then by the Spaniards. Inca influence remains in religious beliefs, folklore, food, and art. The Aymara are mostly farmers and keep herds of llamas* * *= Aymara.Ex: This book looks at the linguistic history of potato cultivation in the Andes by considering the Quechua and Aymara terminology associated with this crop.
* * *Aymaraaimará (↑ aimara a1)1 (indio) Aymara Indian2A large Indian ethnic group living on the harsh Titicaca plateau in the Andes in southern Peru and northern Bolivia, who speak Aymara. They were conquered by the Incas, then by the Spaniards. Inca influence remains in religious beliefs, folklore, food, and art. The Aymara are mostly farmers and keep herds of llamas.* * *
aimará adjetivo
Aymara
■ sustantivo masculino y femenino
Aymara Indian
* * * -
15 aymara
adj.Aymara.f. & m.1 Aymara.2 Aymara.* * *= Aymara.Ex. This book looks at the linguistic history of potato cultivation in the Andes by considering the Quechua and Aymara terminology associated with this crop.* * *= Aymara.Ex: This book looks at the linguistic history of potato cultivation in the Andes by considering the Quechua and Aymara terminology associated with this crop.
* * *Aymara ( before n)1 Aymara Indian* * *aymara, aimara♦ adjAymara♦ nmf[persona] Aymara♦ nm[lengua] AymaraAYMARAAymara was the language of an ancient culture which flourished between the fifth and eleventh centuries at Tiahuanaco in what are now the highlands of Bolivia and which was subsequently conquered by the Incas. In the last fifty years there has been a renaissance in Aymara culture and the language itself, which today has over one and a half million speakers of its various dialects in the mountain areas of Peru, Bolivia and Chile. In December 2005 an Aymara speaker, Evo Morales, won a landslide electoral victory to become the first indigenous president of Bolivia. -
16 inca
adj.Inca.f. & m.Inca.* * *► adjetivo1 Inca1 Inca* * *SMF Inca* * *Iadjetivo Inca, IncaicIImasculino y femenino Inca•• Cultural note:Founded in the twelfth century in the region of Lake Titicaca, the Andean empire of the Quechua-speaking Incas grew until by the fifteenth century it extended from southern Colombia in the north to Argentina and central Chile in the south. Their society was rigidly divided into classes: the nobility, their servants, and the common people. The Incas worshipped the sun and the moon, and believed that Manco Capac, their first emperor or inca, was descended from the sun. An extensive network of roads was built to facilitate control over the empire from its capital in Cuzco. The Incas left an impressive heritage of monuments, including the palace complex of Machu Picchu. The empire collapsed in 1533 when the Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro had the emperor Atahualpa executed and occupied Cuzco* * *= Inca.Ex. Men in the Mayan, Aztec, and Inca empires all wore loincloths, the most basic form of male clothing in many ancient cultures.* * *Iadjetivo Inca, IncaicIImasculino y femenino Inca•• Cultural note:Founded in the twelfth century in the region of Lake Titicaca, the Andean empire of the Quechua-speaking Incas grew until by the fifteenth century it extended from southern Colombia in the north to Argentina and central Chile in the south. Their society was rigidly divided into classes: the nobility, their servants, and the common people. The Incas worshipped the sun and the moon, and believed that Manco Capac, their first emperor or inca, was descended from the sun. An extensive network of roads was built to facilitate control over the empire from its capital in Cuzco. The Incas left an impressive heritage of monuments, including the palace complex of Machu Picchu. The empire collapsed in 1533 when the Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro had the emperor Atahualpa executed and occupied Cuzco* * *= Inca.Ex: Men in the Mayan, Aztec, and Inca empires all wore loincloths, the most basic form of male clothing in many ancient cultures.
* * *inca1Inca, Incaicinca2Incas (↑ inca a1)Inca* * *
inca sustantivo masculino y femenino
Inca
inca adjetivo & mf Inca
' inca' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
incaico
English:
Inca
* * *♦ adjInca♦ nmfInca* * *m/f & adj Inca* * *inca adj & nmf: Inca -
17 quichuista
-
18 runa simi
SM And Quechua, Quechua language -
19 quichua
-
20 кечуа
м. (мн.) нескл.( группа индейских племен) quechua(s) m (pl), quichua(s) m (pl)
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Quechua — Quechua … Deutsch Wörterbuch
Quéchua — Quechua Pour les articles homonymes, voir Quechua (homonymie). Quéchua Runasimi Parlée en Argentine, Bolivie, Chili, Colombie, Équateur, Pérou Région Andes … Wikipédia en Français
quechua — [ ketʃwa ] n. m. • quichoa 1765; mot indigène ♦ Langue indienne comprenant plusieurs parlers, employée sur les hauts plateaux du Pérou et de la Bolivie. Le quechua fut la langue des Incas. On écrirait mieux quéchua. On dit aussi QUICHUA . ●… … Encyclopédie Universelle
quechua — QUÉCHUA adj. invar., s.f. invar. 1. s.f. invar. Populaţie amerindiană care trăieşte în ţinuturile muntoase din Peru, în vestul Boliviei şi în zona de frontieră cu Bolivia a statelor Argentina şi Chile. 2. adj. invar. Care aparţine sau este… … Dicționar Român
Quechua — [kech′wä, kech′wə] n. [Sp < Quechua qheswa, qhechwa, temperate valleys ] 1. pl. Quechuas or Quechua a member of a group of South American Indian peoples dominant in the former Inca Empire 2. the language of these peoples, now spoken widely in… … English World dictionary
quechua — ‘De un pueblo indígena americano, componente principal del Imperio incaico, asentado hoy especialmente en zonas andinas del Perú, Bolivia y el Ecuador’. Como sustantivo masculino, ‘lengua de los quechuas, la principal del Imperio incaico’. Esta… … Diccionario panhispánico de dudas
Quechua — Indian people of Peru and surrounding regions, 1840, from Spanish, from Quechua kechua plunderer, destroyer … Etymology dictionary
quechua — adjetivo,sustantivo masculino y femenino 1. De un conjunto de pueblos amerindios que viven en los Andes: una costumbre quechua. sustantivo masculino 1. Área: linguística Lengua andina, aún viva, hablada por los quechuas, que es oficial en el Perú … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
Quechua — (spr ketschūa), Indianerstamm, s. Quichua … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Quechua — (spr. ketschuá), Quichua, Kechua, Keschua, Ketschua oder Khetschua, ursprünglich Name eines Stammes der alten Peruaner am obern Apurimac, dann Bezeichnung der Hauptsprache des alten Inkareichs, eine der entwickeltsten Amerikas, noch gegenwärtig… … Kleines Konversations-Lexikon
quechua — (Quizá del nombre de una tribu peruana). 1. adj. Se dice del indígena que al tiempo de la colonización del Perú habitaba la región del Cuzco, y, por ext., de otros indígenas pertenecientes al Imperio incaico. U. t. c. s.) 2. Se dice de los… … Diccionario de la lengua española