Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The culture of Argentina is as varied as the country geography and is composed of a mix of ethnic groups.Modern Argentine culture has been influenced largely by the Spanish colonial period and the 19th/20th century European immigration (mainly Italian and Spanish), and also by Amerindian culture, particularly in the fields of music and art.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
The Republic of Argentina has not established, legally, an official language; however, Spanish has been utilized since the founding of the Argentine state by the administration of the Republic and is used in education in all public establishments, so much so that in basic and secondary levels there is a mandatory subject of Spanish (a subject called "language").
No evidence of the language has survived. Yaghan, Yámana, Háusi-Kúta or Yagán is a language spoken by indigenous peoples of southern shores and islands of Tierra del Fuego. A very analytical language, it had an extensive vocabulary. In Argentina Yaghan became extinct at the beginning of the 20th century, but lexicons and
La Lengua Chaná: Patrimonio Cultural de Entre Ríos is a book written by Blas Wilfredo Omar Jaime and José Pedro Viegas Barros and published in Argentina in 2013, that is the first systematic work about the culture and language of Chaná people in modern times, containing a historic and linguistic overview of the language, a bilingual dictionary and folk tales of this peoples.
Viveza criolla is a Spanish language phrase literally meaning "creole vivacity" [1] and may be translated as "creoles' cleverness" or "creoles cunning", [citation needed] describing a way of life in Argentina, [2] Uruguay, [3] Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela, among other Latin American countries. It is also known as " criollada " in Peru.
The Chaná language [2] (autolinguonym: Lanték, meaning "speak" or "language"; from lan, "tongue" and tek, a communicative suffix) [3] is one of the Charruan languages spoken by the Chaná people in what is now Argentina and Uruguay along the Uruguay and Paraná Rivers on the margins of the Río de la Plata.
Cuyo Spanish or Cuyano Spanish (Castellano Cuyano) [1] is the dialect of Spanish that evolved in the historical province of Cuyo and that is now spoken in the Argentine provinces of Mendoza and San Juan.