Category "Indigenous languages of the Americas"
- The main article for this category is Indigenous languages of the Americas.
Many of the subcategories group these languages into geographic culture areas.
Languages that are within the same culture area are not necessarily related genetically (e.g. Chiricahua Apache is a language of the Southwest but it is not related to Hopi, another language of the Southwest. However, Chiricahua is related to Dena’ina, a language of the Subarctic spoken in Alaska).
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South America
For South America, the subcategories follow Terrence Kaufman's "geolinguistic regions":
- Northwest (includes southern Central America)
- Northeastern Brazil
- Eastern Brazil
- Amazonia
- Northern Amazonia
- Central Amazonia
- Western Amazonia (Kaufman actually has 2 regions here: Western Amazonia I & II)
- the Foothills (or Montaña)
- Andes
- The Cone
- The Chaco
Central America
Central America is mostly Mesoamerica. However, parts of Central America are under the North American Southwest and the South American Northwest.
North America
The culture areas for North America follow the general received consensus:
- Arctic
- Subarctic
- Northwest Coast
- Plateau
- Great Basin
- California
- Southwest (includes some parts of Mexico)
- Plains (sometimes divided into Plains and Prairie regions)
- Southeast
- Northeastern Woodlands
See also
Subcategories
There are 22 subcategories to this category shown below (more may be shown on subsequent pages).
Pages in category "Indigenous languages of the Americas"
There are 15 pages in this section of this category.
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