Cabécar language

[1] Cabécar is considered to be one of a few "Chibcha-speaking tribes", categorized by similarities in the languages that they speak.Other Chibcha speaking tribes include the Bribri and the Boruca, also of Costa Rica.It is believed that the languages of the Chibcha speaking tribes shared a common ancestor around 8,000 years ago.It is spoken by the Cabécar people, an indigenous group located near the Talamancan mountains of Costa Rica.[3] Cabécar uses a Latin alphabet with umlauts for (ë, ö), and tildes for (ã, ẽ, ĩ, õ, ũ).
Costa RicaTurrialbaCartago ProvinceCabécar peopleLanguage familyChibchanCore-ChibchanWriting systemISO 639-3GlottologChibchan language familyBribriBorucaMesoamericaTalamancan mountainsumlautstildesvowelsnasalizedBilabialDentalAlveolarRetroflexPostalveolarGlottalPlosiveFricativeAffricateCentralNear-highMid-highsubject–object–verbEthnologueQuesada Pacheco, Miguel ÁngelPozas Arciniega, RicardoLanguages of Costa RicaSpanishBuglereGuaymíMalékuAmerican EnglishHaitian CreoleHaitian FrenchChibchan languagesNgäbereTalamancaHuetarTeribeCorobicíChibchaArhuacoChimilaKankuamoBorũcaDorasqueextinct languages