Trumai language

TrumaĆ­
Tramalhy
ho kod ke
Native toBrazil
Regionupper Xingu River region of the Xingu Indigenous Park
Ethnicity120 Trumai people (2006)
Native speakers
51 of varying fluency (2006)
Language codes
ISO 639-3tpy
Glottologtrum1247
ELPTrumai
Trumai is classified as Critically Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.

Trumai is an endangered language isolate of Brazil. Most Trumai are fluent in languages of wider communication, and children are not learning it well. It is highly divergent from other South American languages, such as distinguishing unusual consonants.

Trumai is a language spoken by the indigenous community of the same name located in the Xingu reserve along the Upper Xingu River in central Brazil. Murphy and Quain reported that there were only 25 people remaining in the Trumai community. This has since increased to 94 as of 1997, of which 51 people spoke the Trumai language. In the International Encyclopedia of Linguistics, Grimes observes that there are 78 speakers as of 2003. Due to the popularity of speaking Portuguese among the local population, Trumai is considered an extremely endangered language because the children are not learning to speak it as a first language.