Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 20, 2026

Dorasque language

Dorasque is an extinct Chibchan language formerly spoken by the Dorasque in the territory between the plains of Barú and Changuinola to the north, the banks of the Chiriquí Viejo and Piedras rivers to the south, Chiriquí to the east, and Burica and Térraba to the west. Its dialects were Chumulu and Gualaca. It is closely related to Chánguena (Chánguina), which is considered by some authors to be variants of the same language.

Last revised
Jun 20, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
197 w
Citations
2
Source
Dorasque
Native toPanama, Costa Rica
EthnicityDorasque
Extinct(date missing)
Chibchan
Dialects
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
Glottologdora1242

Dorasque is an extinct Chibchan language formerly spoken by the Dorasque in the territory between the plains of Barú and Changuinola to the north, the banks of the Chiriquí Viejo and Piedras rivers to the south, Chiriquí to the east, and Burica and Térraba to the west (between the present-day province of Puntarenas in Costa Rica and the western departments of Panama).1 Its dialects were Chumulu and Gualaca. It is closely related to Chánguena (Chánguina), which is considered by some authors to be variants of the same language.2

References

References

  1. Miranda de Cabal, Beatriz (1974). Un pueblo visto a través de su lenguaje (in Spanish). p. 9. Retrieved 2026-04-18.
  2. Adolfo Constenla Umaña (1985). Las lenguas dorasque y changuena y sus relaciones genealógicas (1) (in Spanish). Vol. 11. Revista de Filología y Lingüística de la Universidad de Costa Rica. pp. 81–92. doi:10.15517/rfl.v11i2.16685. ISSN 2215-2628. Retrieved 2026-04-18.
Bibliography

Bibliography