Participants
- Frank Seifart
- Juan Alvaro Echeverri
Re-evaluation of the Witotoan/Boran family/ies
In this project we examined the relationship between the Boran languages (Bora and Muinane) and the Witotoan languages (Witoto proper, Ocaina, Nonuya) spoken in the Northwest Amazon. We evaluated the evidence for a distant genealogical relationship between these two groups, based on newly available data from the Nonuya language, and the identification of borrowing between Boran and Witotoan languages.
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Past Research & Resources
- Documentation and Description
- Typological Surveys
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Language History
- Computational and quantitative methods in historical linguistics
- Inheritance and contact in a language complex: the case of Taa varieties (Tuu family)
- Intercontinental Dictionary Series (IDS)
- Language Relatedness and Divergence: Quantitative and Phylogenetic Approaches
- Re-evaluation of the Witotoan/Boran family/ies
- 'Sound Comparisons': New Tools and Resources for Exploring Language Family Diversity on the Web
- Sounds of the Andean Languages
- The Kalahari Basin area: a 'Sprachbund' on the verge of extinction
- Towards a Cross-Disciplinary Prehistory: Converging Perspectives from Language, Archaeology and Genes
- Advances in Evolutionary Phonology
- Language Areality in Ancient Eurasia
- Correlating Genes and Languages
- Loanword Typology: Comparative Study of Lexical Borrowability
- Quantitative approaches to lexical comparison
- Maya writing and historical linguistics
- Language Contact
- Phonetics and Phonology
- Jakarta Field Station
- Resources
- Former Staff
- Past Events
- Conferences