| Amarakaeri | |
|---|---|
| Native to | Perú |
| Ethnicity | Amarakaeri people (1,620 all Harákmbut, 2007) |
|
Native speakers
|
(500 cited 1987) |
|
Harákmbut–Katukinan
|
|
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | |
| Glottolog | amar1274 |
Amarakaeri is an indigenous American language of the Harakmbet language family spoken in Peru along the Madre de Dios and Colorado Rivers. There is less than 1% literacy compared to 5 to 15% literacy in second language Spanish. There is one dialect called Kisambaeri. It is an official language and has a dictionary. Amarakaeri speakers include the Kochimberi, Küpondirideri, Wíntaperi, Wakitaneri, and Kareneri gold panning tribes. There is a common misconception is that Amarakaeri is an Arawakan language. Alternate names include Amarakaire, Amaracaire, and Mashco; the latter of which is considered a pejorative term.