The Migration From Shinar Or the Earliest Links Between the Old And New Contin

Cover The Migration From Shinar Or the Earliest Links Between the Old And New Contin
The Migration From Shinar Or the Earliest Links Between the Old And New Contin
George Palmer
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The language spoken in Peru was for the most part the Quichua, but it was by no means 12 1 78 THE MIGRATION FROM SHINAR.
the only one. It is said the Incas had a secret language of their own, but this is generally doubted, as no traces of it have yet been discovered. A few words of the Quichua have been seized hold of by different writers as resembling corresponding ones in the Sanscrit, Hebrew, Chinese, and Carthaginian, but without much result.
The Aymara language of Bolivia very much resembl
...es the Quichua, and Rivero considers them to have the same root.
The Puquina language, spoken in some of the valleys on the coast, is radically different from any other American idiom. This fact is not confined to the Puquina, for the Guaranee race are found in Paraguay, with a language almost monosyllabic, and which, according to Professor Leoni Levi, bears a close analogy with the Chinese. " How came they, " he asks, " to be in the centre of South America ? Are they remnants of the Inca race of Peru ?


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