Quechua
0 sources
Quechua
Summary
Quechua is a language family[1]. Quechua ranks in the top 2% of language_family entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,908 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Quechua is in the country of Peru[3].
- Quechua is in the country of Bolivia[4].
- Quechua is in the country of Ecuador[5].
- Quechua is in the country of Argentina[6].
- Quechua is in the country of Colombia[7].
- Quechua's instance of is recorded as language family[8].
- Quechua's instance of is recorded as natural language[9].
- Quechua's instance of is recorded as macrolanguage[10].
- Quechua's instance of is recorded as modern language[11].
- Quechua's instance of is recorded as human language[12].
- Quechua followed Proto-Quechua[13].
- Quechua is a type of Indigenous languages of the Americas[14].
- Quechua is a type of Quechuan[15].
- Quechua's writing system is recorded as Latin script[16].
- Quechua's Commons category is recorded as Quechuan languages[17].
- Quechua's Wikimedia language code is recorded as qu[18].
- Quechua comprises Southern Quechua[19].
- Quechua comprises Ancash Quechua[20].
- Quechua comprises Northern Quichua[21].
- Quechua comprises Cajamarca Quechua[22].
- 1 marks the founding of Quechua[23].
- Quechua's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': -14, 'lon': -72}[24].
- Quechua's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Quechua language[25].
- Quechua's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Quechuan languages[26].
- Quechua's language regulatory body is recorded as Academia Mayor de la Lengua Quechua[27].
Why It Matters
Quechua ranks in the top 2% of language_family entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,908 views/month).[2] Quechua has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Quechua is known by 42 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]