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Aymara
[ ahy-mah-rah ]
noun
- a member of an Indian people living in the mountainous regions around Lake Titicaca in Bolivia and Peru.
- the language of the Aymara people.
Aymara
/ ˌɪəˈɑː /
noun
- -ras-ra a member of a South American Indian people of Bolivia and Peru
- the language of this people, probably related to Quechua
Derived Forms
- ˌ⳾ˈ, adjective
Other Word Forms
- m· adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of Aymara1
Word History and Origins
Origin of Aymara1
Example Sentences
According to the Aymara peoples of Bolivia and Peru, a group of settlers trekking through the mountains had made camp, but their campfire spiraled out of control, angering the gods, who washed them away with a stormy flood.
Leading the fiery demonstrations was Evo Morales, a native Aymara cocalero from the Chapare and the president of a powerful coca-growers’ union, raging against neoliberal economics and the war on coca — both seen as stand-ins for gringo imperialism.
The Aymara women fear climate change could sweep away their jobs.
The Aymara women remember a time when practically every spot on the glaciers was covered in snow, but now there are parts with nothing but rocks.
The six-inch-long reptile, called a jararanko—which translates to “lizard” in the Indigenous Aymara language—climbs onto a rock, basking in the sunlight.
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