Ingain | |
States: | Brazil |
Region: | Santa Catarina |
Extinct: | early 20th century? |
Familycolor: | American |
Fam1: | Macro-Jê |
Fam2: | Jê |
Fam3: | Jê of Paraná |
Dia1: | Kimdá |
Iso3: | none |
Glotto: | inga1253 |
Glottorefname: | Ingain-Kimda |
Ingain is an extinct Jê language of Brazil, closely related to the Southern Jê languages Kaingáng and Laklãnõ (Xokléng). Kimdá may have been a dialect. Ingain was spoken along the middle Paraná River, from the Iguatemi River in the north to the Arroyo Yabebiry in the south.[1]
Related "South Kaingáng" languages were:[2]
. Čestmír Loukotka . Classification of South American Indian languages . registration . UCLA Latin American Center . 1968 . Los Angeles.
. John Alden Mason . 1950 . The languages of South America . Julian . Steward . Handbook of South American Indians . 6 . 157–317 . Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 143 . Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office.