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Mapudungun for English speakers

This guide's detailed text is shown in its source language while the translation is in progress. View the full site in English →

Flashcards — 66 words

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A1.1Beginner · Foundations

2. What is Mapudungun?

Mapudungun ("the speech of the land") is the language of the Mapuche people, spoken in central-southern Chile and neighbouring parts of Argentina. Estimates vary widely but run into the hundreds of thousands of speakers, with a strong revitalization movement.

It is unrelated to Spanish or any European language — it forms the small Araucanian family. Still, centuries of contact have left many loanwords in both directions: Chilean Spanish is full of Mapudungun (guata, pichintún, place names like Temuco, "water of the temu tree").

A1.2Beginner · Building Basics

Why learn Mapudungun?

  • It's already in Chilean Spanish — You'll recognize a surprising amount of vocabulary.
  • A fascinating grammar — Agglutinative verbs, a dual number, and evidential marking reshape how you think about language.
  • A living, dignified language — Learning it accompanies an ongoing cultural and political reclamation.
  • Rooted in the land — The hills, rivers, and towns of the south only fully make sense in Mapudungun.
A2.1Elementary · Everyday Language

4. Essential Grammar

Mapudungun is agglutinative and very verb-centred: a single verb-word can pack what English needs a whole sentence for. There is no grammatical gender.

A2.2Elementary · Expanding Range

Three numbers: singular, dual, plural

Beyond singular and plural there is a dual (exactly two). And "we" distinguishes whether it includes you:

MapudungunEnglish
incheI
inchiwwe two
inchiñwe (several)
eymi / eymu / eymünyou / you two / you (plural)

Verbs build on a root + suffixes marking person, number, tense, and even the source of the information (evidentiality). The infinitive is cited with -n: amun (to go), kimün (to know).

Higher numbers are Quechua loans: pataka (100), warangka (1000).

B1.1Intermediate · Independent Use

5. Pronunciation

There are six vowels — the five Spanish-like ones plus ü. Several alphabets exist (Unified, Raguileo, Azümchefe); this guide uses the Unified one.

LetterSoundExample
üa high central vowel (neither "oo" nor "ee")küyen (moon)
tra single retroflex consonant, like Chilean "tr"trewa (dog)
doften a soft "th" /ð/mapudungun
ng (g)/ŋ/ — "ng" in "sing"dungun (to speak)
B1.2Intermediate · Connected Language

6. Common Mistakes

  • Pronouncing tr as two sounds — it's a single retroflex consonant, not "t"+"r."
  • Forgetting the dual — for exactly two people use the dual forms (inchiw, eymu), not the plural.
  • Ignoring ü — it's a distinct vowel; küyen (moon) isn't "kuyen."
  • Looking for gender — there's no masculine/feminine; don't force agreement.
  • Mixing alphabets — Unified, Raguileo, and Azümchefe spell differently. Pick one (here, the Unified).
B2.1Upper-Intermediate · Fluency & Nuance

7. Learning Resources

  • KimeltuwebeginnerFree graphic materials (posters, vocabulary, grammar) that are very clear for starting out.
  • iTalkiall levelsFind speakers to practice with (limited but valuable).

8. Culture & Context

B2.2Upper-Intermediate · Consolidation

Mari mari

The greeting mari mari (literally "ten ten") works at any time of day, often with peñi (brother, between men) or lamngen (brother/sister).

Wallmapu and the land

The idea of mapu (land) and Wallmapu (the Mapuche territory) is central: language, people (che), and land are joined in the very word mapuche, "people of the land."

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