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  2. Chicham languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicham_languages

    The extinct Palta language was classified as Chicham by Jacinto Jijón y Caamaño about 1940 and was followed by Čestmír Loukotka.However, only a few words are known, and Kaufman (1994) states that there is "little resemblance".

  3. Jivaroan peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jivaroan_peoples

    The shaman goes about relieving the patient of any harmful spirits that may be attacking his or her body. The Jivaro also believe in an act of what may be considered telling the future or telling time. Bennett makes another note of the Jivaro and their ayahuasca ceremonies, where a Jivaro will hire a shaman to tell of far away friends and family.

  4. Shuar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuar

    The Shuar, also known as Jivaro, are an indigenous ethnic group that inhabits the Ecuadorian and Peruvian Amazonia. They are famous for their hunting skills and their tradition of head shrinking, known as Tzantsa. The Shuar language belongs to the Jivaroan linguistic family and is spoken by over 50,000 people in the region.

  5. Jivaro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jivaro

    Jivaro languages, a language family of northern Peru and eastern Ecuador; Jivaro, a 1954 American 3-D film; Jíbaro, English title Wild Dogs, a 1985 Cuban film; Lake Jivaro, a reservoir in Shawnee County, Kansas, United States; Jibaro, the final episode of season three of Love, Death + Robots which won several awards.

  6. Shuar language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuar_language

    Shuar (which literally means "people", also known by such (now derogatory) terms as Chiwaro, Jibaro, Jivaro, or Xivaro) is an indigenous language spoken by the Shuar people of Morona Santiago Province and Pastaza Province in the Ecuadorian Amazon basin.

  7. Shiwiar language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiwiar_language

    Shiwiar, also known as Achuar, Jivaro and Maina, is a Chicham language spoken along the Pastaza and Bobonaza rivers in Ecuador. Shiwiar is one of the thirteen indigenous languages of Ecuador. [ 2 ] All of these indigenous languages are endangered.

  8. Jivaro people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Jivaro_people&redirect=no

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  9. Jíbaro (Puerto Rico) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jíbaro_(Puerto_Rico)

    As early as 1820, Miguel Cabrera identified many of the jíbaros' ideas and characteristics in his set of poems known as The Jibaro's Verses.Then, some 80 years later, in his 1898 book Cuba and Porto Rico, Robert Thomas Hill listed jíbaros as one of four socio-economic classes he perceived existed in Puerto Rico at the time: "The native people, as a whole, may be divided into four classes ...