User:Benwing2/pages-containing-maquiritari

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  • Page 95 kaju: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology|usually suffixed with {{m|mch|-nña}}}} the mythological Sky or Heaven, an invisible sky beyond the visible sky divided into eight houses
  • Page 101 sotto: Found match for regex: # Maquiritari speaker, Ye'kwana, Maquiritari
  • Page 224 Wiktionary:About Maquiritari: Found match for regex: This page deals with the specific issues of Maquiritari entries on Wiktionary. For language-independent guidelines for entries see Wiktionary:Entry layout explained.
  • Page 224 Wiktionary:About Maquiritari: Found match for regex: There are a number of different dialects of Maquiritari, sometimes identified as separate languages in their own right. Traditionally four variants have been identified: Ye’kwana in the northeast, along the {{w|Merevarí River|Merevari}} and {{w|Caura River (Venezuela)|Caura}} Rivers; De’kwana in the west, along the middle and lower {{w|Ventuari River}}; Ihuruana in the center, at the sources of the Caura, Ventuari, and other rivers; and Kunuana in the southwest, along the {{w|Cunucunuma River}}. In practice there is disagreement as to what exactly these terms refer to, and more recent research suggests that Kunuana is the same dialect as De’kwana, and Ihuruana the same as Ye’kwana. Current practice on Wiktionary thus observes only the twofold distinction Ye’kwana–De’kwana. De’kwana is seen as the more traditional or cultured dialect, while Ye’kwana is more widely spoken.
  • Page 224 Wiktionary:About Maquiritari: Found match for regex: Terminology can be confusing, as speakers see the term Ye’kwana/De’kwana as applying to all Maquiritari, regardless of which dialectal variant of the term they use, and the words are often used this way instead of in reference to individual dialects. Cautious use of sources is advised.
  • Page 224 Wiktionary:About Maquiritari: Found match for regex: Maquiritari has used several different systems of transcription in the past. Historically, the two main systems in use were one devised by Spanish-speaking missionaries following the orthographical conventions of Spanish, and one later devised in the 1970s according to the Venezuelan Indigenous Languages Alphabet (ALIV) conventions. Various other systems are inconsistently in use among linguists. The transcription system used at Wiktionary, based on the modification of the ALIV conventions given in Cáceres’s Functional-Typological Grammar of Maquiritari, is given below.
  • Page 224 Wiktionary:About Maquiritari: Found match for regex: * Functional-Typological Grammar of Maquiritari (in French), Ye'kwana dialect
  • Page 224 Wiktionary:About Maquiritari: Found match for regex: Maquiritari
  • Page 224 Wiktionary:About Maquiritari: Found match for regex:
  • Page 243 Maquiritari: Found match for regex: {{wikipedia|Maquiritari language}}
  • Page 243 Maquiritari: Found match for regex: {{en-noun|Maquiritari}}
  • Page 243 Maquiritari: Found match for regex: # A speaker of Maquiritari or member of a Maquiritari-speaking tribe.
  • Page 373 Wanadi: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} A mythological figure functioning variously as a god, shaman, and culture hero, created by the sun and creator of humans, who retreated from the world after its corruption and no longer interferes with earthly affairs
  • Page 374 Kajunña: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} in the mythological Sky or Heaven, an invisible sky beyond the visible sky where Wanadi lives, divided into eight houses or villages and visited by shamans on their initiatory journey
  • Page 378 Odo'sha: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} The evil twin brother of Wanadi, born from his rotting placenta, who serves as the incarnation of all negative or malignant forces
  • Page 552 ssoto: Found match for regex: # Maquiritari speaker, Ye'kwana, Maquiritari
  • Page 705 wötunnö: Found match for regex: # the mythology and stories of the Maquiritari; the Maquiritari oral tradition
  • Page 1074 ye'kwana: Found match for regex: Traditionally interpreted to mean ‘canoe people’ or ‘water log people’, from {{af|mch|iye|t1=wood, tree|kwawö|t2=at (an aquatic object)|-ana|t3=people}} or similar components; however, in the modern language aquatic postpositions of the {{m|mch||kw-}} series can only be used with bodies of water, and folk etymology may be at issue. Gongora (2017) additionally denies that a suffix {{m|mch|-ana}} exists in Ye'kwana, though it is found in related languages and de Civrieux explicitly claims to the contrary that such a suffix does exist. Alternatively, the term may be derived from the proper name {{m|mch|Ye'kwana}} occurring in Maquiritari mythology. Monterrey (2012) additionally notes that some older Ye’kwana claim the term {{m|mch|de'kwana}} to mean people ‘of the Amazon River dolphin’, the ordinary name for which is, however, {{m|mch|muna}}.
  • Page 1074 ye'kwana: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Caura River}} a Ye'kwana, a Maquiritari, a speaker of Ye'kwana or member of a Ye'kwana-speaking tribe
  • Page 1075 de'kwana: Found match for regex: Traditionally interpreted to mean ‘canoe people’ or ‘water log people’, from {{af|mch|dee|t1=wood, tree|kwawö|t2=at (an aquatic object)|-ana|t3=people}} or similar components; however, in the modern language aquatic postpositions of the {{m|mch||kw-}} series can only be used with bodies of water, and folk etymology may be at issue. Gongora (2017) additionally denies that a suffix {{m|mch|-ana}} exists in Ye'kwana, though it is found in related languages and de Civrieux explicitly claims to the contrary that such a suffix does exist. Alternatively, the term may be derived from the proper name {{m|mch|De'kwana}} occurring in Maquiritari mythology. Monterrey (2012) additionally notes that some older Ye’kwana claim the term {{m|mch|de'kwana}} to mean people ‘of the Amazon River dolphin’, the ordinary name for which is, however, {{m|mch|muna}}.
  • Page 1075 de'kwana: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Cunucunuma River}} a Ye'kwana, a Maquiritari, a speaker of Ye'kwana or member of a Ye'kwana-speaking tribe
  • Page 1118 ödemi edajö: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Cunucunuma River}} a master storyteller, singer, and ritual specialist in the Maquiritari tradition, one who has been instructed in all traditional chants by a previous {{m|mch||ödemi edajö}}
  • Page 1122 ödemi eyajö: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Caura River}} a master storyteller, singer, and ritual specialist in the Maquiritari tradition, one who has been instructed in all traditional chants by a previous {{m|mch||ödemi eyajö}}
  • Page 1126 Akujena: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} a lake of restorative water in the middle of the hidden sky ({{m|mch|kaju}}) beyond the visible sky from which shamans are said to gain their understanding
  • Page 1131 Koyojinña: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} in the underground and underwater world, inhabited by dangerous supernatural beings
  • Page 1135 Ye'kwana jüüdü: Found match for regex: From {{af|mch|ye'kwana|t1=Maquiritari|jüü|t2=mountain|-dü|pos3=possessed suffix|id3=possessed}}.
  • Page 1135 Ye'kwana jüüdü: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Caura River}} Mount Dekuana in the {{w|Parima Mountains}}, treated in legend as the origin place of the Maquiritari
  • Page 1136 De'kwana jüüdü: Found match for regex: From {{af|mch|de'kwana|t1=Maquiritari|jüü|t2=mountain|-dü|pos3=possessed suffix|id3=possessed}}.
  • Page 1136 De'kwana jüüdü: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Cunucunuma River}} Mount Dekuana in the {{w|Parima Mountains}}, treated in legend as the origin place of the Maquiritari
  • Page 1139 wejannö: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} fecundity concretized in the form of a primordial egg (often the egg of a great tinamou), the source of life
  • Page 1143 Wiyu: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} the supernatural mistress of the water and mother to its creatures, a malevolent symbol of fecundity appearing variously as the anaconda and the rainbow: the {{w|Plumed Serpent}}
  • Page 1150 Kaweshawa: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} The daughter of the master of fish who became {{m|mch|Wanadi}}’s wife
  • Page 1165 Wana sejjedü: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} one of the eight houses of the invisible sky beyond the sky ({{m|mch|kaju}}), the one inhabited exclusively by {{m|mch|Wanadi}}, from which he sends out and to which he collects eye spirits ({{m|mch|önu ekato}}) and heart spirits ({{m|mch|do'ta}}) at birth and death
  • Page 1178 Yujudunña: Found match for regex: # in the homeland of the Maquiritari, the region stretching from the right bank of the upper Orinoco River to the lower reaches of the {{w|Ventuari River|Ventuari}} and {{w|Caura River (Venezuela)|Caura}} Rivers
  • Page 1180 Wanatu: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} the first created Maquiritari, made by {{m|mch|Wanadi}} from the clay of Mount Dekuana ({{m|mch|De'kwana jüüdü}})
  • Page 1181 Ye'kwana: Found match for regex: # {{syn of|en|Maquiritari||A [[Cariban]] [[language]] of [[Venezuela]]}}.
  • Page 1181 Ye'kwana: Found match for regex: # {{syn of|en|Maquiritari||A [[speaker]] of this language or member of a tribe that speaks it}}.
  • Page 1181 Ye'kwana: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Caura River|Maquiritari mythology}} {{synonym of|mch|Wanatu||the [[first]] [[create]]d [[Maquiritari]], made by ''[[Wanadi]]'' from the [[clay]] of Mount Dekuana}}
  • Page 1181 Ye'kwana: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Caura River}} {{alt form|mch|ye'kwana||Maquiritari}}
  • Page 1182 De'kwana: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Cunucunuma River|Maquiritari mythology}} {{synonym of|mch|Wanatu||the [[first]] [[create]]d [[Maquiritari]], made by ''[[Wanadi]]'' from the [[clay]] of Mount Dekuana}}
  • Page 1182 De'kwana: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Cunucunuma River}} {{alt form|mch|de'kwana||Maquiritari}}
  • Page 1196 Wanasedume: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} the first hypostasis ({{m|mch|amode}}) of {{m|mch|Wanadi}} that he sent to earth, who created the original people that became the animals, and from whose placenta {{m|mch|Odo'sha}} was born before he retreated back to the sky
  • Page 1199 Wanasedu: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} the original {{m|mch|Wanadi}} who resides permanently in the sky and occasionally sends down his hypostases ({{m|mch|amode}}) to earth
  • Page 1303 Komashi: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} a culture hero, the first human to be taught by {{m|mch|Wanadi}} to wear beads as a form of magical protection
  • Page 1332 anejankomo: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|plural only}} non-Maquiritari people, outsiders
  • Page 1394 Madawaka: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} a vast tree, the origin of all food and vegetation, that was felled long ago, leaving behind {{w|Cerro Marahuaca}} as a stump
  • Page 1395 Uda'jö: Found match for regex: # {{lb|mch|Maquiritari mythology}} the chief of the star people who led them into the sky, where he and his six hypostases ({{m|mch|amode}}) became the Pleiades
  • Page 1431 Maiongong: Found match for regex: # {{synonym of|en|Maquiritari}}
  • Page 1432 Makiritare: Found match for regex: # {{alternative form of|en|Maquiritari}}
  • Page 1769 Wiktionary:Frequency lists/German/Mixed web 3M/1950001-2000000: Found match for regex: Maquiritari
  • Page 1779 Wiktionary:Todo/manually crafted labels: Found match for regex: |Maquiritari||ashichadu||# <code><nowiki>{{q|Brazil}} {{alt form|mch|ashichadü||sugarcane}}</nowiki>
  • Page 1780 Wiktionary:Todo/Lists/Entries linking to raw template syntax: Found match for regex: | eta (edit) || Unsupported_titles/`lcub``lcub``lcub`def`rcub``rcub``rcub` and 2 others || Basque, Catalan, English, Esperanto, Faroese, Haitian Creole, Icelandic, Italian, Japanese, Laboya, Manggarai, Maquiritari, Norwegian Nynorsk, Ojibwe, Old Norse, Ottawa, Pali, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Sotho, Spanish, Tswana