American Indian languages
American Indian tribes
What's new on our site today!

Huarayo Indian Language (Ese'ejja)
Huarayo is a Tacanan language of South America.
Huarayo is spoken by 1,500 people in Bolivia and Peru. Word order is primarily SOV.
Sponsored Links
Huarayo Words:
Our list of vocabulary words in the Huarayo language, with comparison to words in other Pano-Tacanan languages.
Huarayo Animal Words:
Illustrated glossary of animal words in the Huarayo language.
Peru Linguistic Map
Tribes and Languages of Peru:
Bolivian Languages:
Maps showing the areas in South America where Ese Eja is spoken.
Ese Ejja Language
Ese Ejja Bible Translation:
Scanned-in Huarayo language materials from the Rosetta Project.
Ese Eja Prayer:
Christian prayers translated into Huarayo.
La Lengua Ese'eha (Warayo):
Information on Huarayo including linguistic maps of Bolivia and South America. Page in Spanish.
House of Languages: Ese Ejja:
Information about Ese'Ejja language usage.
Human Rights: Ese Ejja:
Translation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights into the Ese Ejja language.
Ese Ejja Language:
Demographic information on Huarayo from the Ethnologue of Languages.
Ese'jja Language Tree:
Theories about Huarayo's language relationships compiled by Linguist List.
Ese Ejja Language Structures:
Ese Ejja linguistic profile and academic bibliography.
Huarayo Culture:
Article on the history and traditions of the Huarayo tribe.
The meanings of kinship among the Ese Ejja of northern Bolivia:
Anthropological article on the Huarayo tribe.
Links, References, and Additional Information
Wikipedia: Ese’ejja:
Encyclopedia articles on the Ese'ejja language.
Los Eseejja (Huarayo)
Pueblo Ese Ejja
Cultura Ese Eja
Lengua Ese Eja
Los Ese'Ejja
Idioma Ese'eha:
Los Ese'ejja:
Information about the Huarayos in Spanish.

Back to our Indian Culture homepage
Back to our page of South American Indians
Back to Native American links for kids

Native American hairstyle
Traditional Native medicine
Indian tattoos
Would you like to sponsor our work on the Huarayo Indian language?
Native Languages of the Americas website © 1998-2020
Contacts and FAQ page