2. What is Guaraní?
Guaraní (avañe'ẽ, "the people's language") is a Tupí-Guaraní language and a co-official language of Paraguay alongside Spanish.1 It is spoken by 6-7 million people and is the rare case of an Indigenous American language used by the majority of a country's population — including many non-Indigenous Paraguayans.
In practice many Paraguayans speak jopara, a fluid mix of Guaraní and Spanish. The everyday vocabulary borrows heavily from Spanish, but the grammatical core of Guaraní is completely unlike a European language.
Why learn Guaraní?
- A national Indigenous language — Unique in the Americas: spoken across an entire country, not just by communities.
- A genuinely new grammar — Prefix conjugation, nasal harmony, and nominal tense rewire how you think about language.
- Real human access to Paraguay — Speaking Guaraní transforms how you're received in everyday life.
- Recognizable loanwords — Jopara means you'll spot Spanish vocabulary mixed in.
4. Essential Grammar
Guaraní has no grammatical gender and conjugates verbs with person prefixes, not endings. Verbs are usually cited by their root.
Prefix conjugation
With the root guata ("to walk"): aguata (I walk), reguata (you walk), oguata (he/she walks), jaguata (we walk, including you), roguata (we walk, excluding you).
Practice: Guaraní person prefixes (areal verbs)
Practice: the person prefixes that begin an areal (active) verb — a- (I), re- (you), o- (s/he, they), ja- (we incl.), ro- (we excl.), pe- (you pl.). Guaraní conjugates with prefixes, not endings. Type only the missing prefix.. Type the missing word — accents are optional.
- 1.guata
Hint: 1sg subject prefix
- 2.guata
Hint: 2sg subject prefix
- 3.guata
Hint: 3sg subject prefix
- 4.guata
Hint: 1pl inclusive prefix
- 5.guata
Hint: 2pl subject prefix
- 6.guata
Hint: 3pl prefix (= 3sg)
- 7.karu
Hint: 1sg subject prefix
- 8.karu
Hint: 2sg subject prefix
- 9.karu
Hint: 1pl exclusive prefix
- 10.karu
Hint: 3pl prefix
10 questions
Grammar reference: Areal verb person-prefix paradigm per B. Estigarribia & J. Pinta (eds.), Guarani Linguistics in the 21st Century (Brill, 2017), and this guide's own §4 prefix-conjugation example (aguata, reguata); verbs guata 'walk' and karu 'eat'. All sentences original to LinguaCommons.. Sentences are original to LinguaCommons.
Two kinds of "we" + nominal tense
- Guaraní distinguishes ñande (we, including you) from ore (we, not including you).
- Even nouns can take tense: che róga (my house) → che rógakue (my former house) → che rógarã (my future house).
Nasal harmony spreads nasality across a whole word; the tilde marks nasal vowels (ã, ẽ, ĩ, õ, ũ, ỹ).
5. Pronunciation
The oral vowels (a e i o u) are as in Spanish, but Guaraní adds features Spanish lacks.
| Letter | Sound | Example |
|---|---|---|
| y | /ɨ/ — a high central vowel, NOT "ee" | y (water) |
| ã ẽ ĩ õ ũ ỹ | nasal vowels (air through the nose) | akã (head) |
| ' | glottal stop (a catch in the voice) | ka'a (yerba mate) |
| j | /dʒ/ — like English "j" | jagua (dog) |
6. Common Mistakes
- Pronouncing y like "ee" — it's a central vowel /ɨ/. y means "water."
- Ignoring nasality — nasal vowels distinguish words; a nasal word isn't the same as its oral version.
- Skipping the glottal stop (') — it's a real letter: ka'a isn't kaa.
- Forgetting inclusive/exclusive "we" — you must choose between ñande and ore.
- Conjugating with endings — Guaraní uses prefixes (a-, re-, o-…); the root doesn't change at the end.
7. Learning Resources
- Secretaría de Políticas Lingüísticas (Paraguay)all levels — Official materials and publications in Guaraní.
- iGuaraníbeginner — A handy online dictionary and tools to get started.
- Vikipetã (Guaraní Wikipedia)intermediate — Authentic reading to build vocabulary.
- iTalkiall levels — Practice with speakers (offer is limited but valuable).
8. Culture & Context
A whole nation's language
Guaraní is exceptional: a national language of identity for most of Paraguay, not only of Indigenous communities. Speaking it is entering the country's soul.
Jopara and tereré
Day to day you'll mostly hear jopara, the living Guaraní-Spanish mix. And tereré (cold mate with ka'a) is a daily social ritual whose vocabulary lives in Guaraní.
Notes
- Encyclopædia Britannica, "Paraguay," accessed June 3, 2026, https://www.britannica.com/place/Paraguay. ↩
Bibliography
Encyclopædia Britannica. "Paraguay." Accessed June 3, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/place/Paraguay.