Bribri

Bribri is a Chibchan language spoken by an estimated 11,000 people in the south of Costa Rica.

Bribri is a Chibchan language spoken by an estimated 11,000 people in the south of Costa Rica. Mainly living off hunting and subsistence agriculture, the Bribri represent the Indigenous population of the Costa Rica-Panama border area and still live in mountainous and coastal areas for the most part isolated from the general population. Three Chibchan dialects have been identified, identified by the Ethnologue as Amubre-Katsi, Coroma, or Salitre-Cabagra, or as belonging to two parts of Talamanca Canton and the area of Buenos Aires Canton.

Affiliation

Bribri is classified by linguists as a Chibchan language. Within the Chibchan family, already considered highly endangered as a whole, Bribri is classified as being a Viceitic language in the “Chibchan A” branch, along with its closest living relative, Cabecar (also spoken in Costa Rica). Three dialects have been identified, identified by the Ethnologue as Amubre-Katsi, Coroma, or Salitre-Cabagra, or as belonging to two parts of Talamanca Canton and the area of Buenos Aires Canton.

Endangerment

Although most ethnic Bribri of all ages still speak the language, there is long-term pressure from Spanish, which most Bribri know and which many are able to read and write. There is some limited use of the Latin-based orthography for Bribri is limited.