Quechumaran, which is composed of the Quechuan and Aymaran families, is the stock with the largest number of speakers—7,000,000 for Quechuan and 1,000,000 for Aymaran—and is found mainly in the Andean highlands extending from southern Colombia to northern Argentina. The languages of this group have also resisted displacement by Spanish, in addition to having gained in numbers of speakers from the time of the Incas to the present as several other groups adopted Quechuan languages. Cuzco-Bolivian Quechua is spoken by well over 1,000,000 speakers, and there are around seven Quechuan languages in Peru with almost 100,000 speakers each. Although most Quechuan languages have been influenced by Spanish, Quechuan in turn is the group that has exerted the most pervasive influence on Spanish. No convincing further genetic relationship has been yet proposed.
Tucanoan
Tucanoan, which is spoken in two compact areas in the western Amazon region (Brazil, Colombia, and Peru), includes about 30 languages with a total of over 30,000 speakers. One of the languages is a lingua franca in the region.
Macro-Pano-Tacanan
Macro-Pano-Tacanan, a group more distantly related than a stock, includes about 30 languages, many of them still spoken. The languages are located in two widely separated regions: lowland eastern Peru and adjoining parts of Brazil and lowland western Bolivia on the one hand, and southern Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego on the other. In the latter region the languages are practically extinct.
By number of component languages, or by number of speakers, or by territorial extension, the other language groups are not as significant as those just listed. Most of these small families and isolated languages are located in the lowlands, which form an arch centred on the Amazon from Venezuela to Bolivia and include the bordering parts of Brazil.
Lingua francas and cultural tongues
Lingua francas as well as situations of bilingualism arose mainly under conditions furthered or created by Europeans, although a case like that of the Tucano language, which is used as a lingua franca in the Río Vaupés area among an Indian population belonging to some 20 different linguistic groups, may be independent of those conditions. Quechua, originally spoken in small areas around Cuzco and in central Peru, expanded much under Inca rule, coexisting with local languages or displacing them. It was the official language of the Inca Empire, and groups of Quechua speakers were settled among other language groups, although the language does not seem to have been systematically imposed. The Spaniards, in turn, used Quechua in a great area as a language of evangelization—at one period missionaries were required to know the language—and continued to spread it by means of Quechua speakers who travelled with them in further conquests. During the 17th and 18th centuries it became a literary language in which religious, historical, and dramatic works were written. Today its written literary manifestations are not spontaneous, but there is abundant oral poetry, and in Bolivia radio programs are broadcast entirely in this language.
Dispersion of Tupí-Guaraní dialects, taking place shortly before the arrival of Europeans and even after it, resulted not from imperial expansion—as for Quechua—but from extreme tribal mobility and the cultural and linguistic absorption of other groups. Under Portuguese influence the modified form of Tupinamba known as língua-geral (“general language”) was the medium of communication between Europeans and Indians and among Indians of different languages in Brazil. It was still in common use along the coast in the 18th century, and it is still spoken in the Amazon. Tupí, now extinct, was an important language of Portuguese evangelization and had a considerable literature in the 17th and 18th centuries. Another dialect, Guaraní, was the language of the Jesuit missions and also had abundant literature until the middle of the 17th century when the Jesuits were expelled and the missions dispersed. Nevertheless, Guaraní survived in Paraguay as the language of a culturally non-Indian population and is today the only Indian language with national, although not official, status—persons not speaking Guaraní being a minority. Paraguayan Guaraní is also a literary language, not so much for learned works—for which Spanish is used—but for those of popular character, especially songs. There is a more or less standardized orthography, and persons literate in Spanish are also literate in Guaraní. A great mutual influence exists between Guaraní and Spanish.