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Before the arrival of the Spaniards, Kunza was
the dominant language in the Atacameño area,
spoken in the towns that lived by the oasis of San Pedro
de Atacama and Lasana.
Kunza belongs to the macro-chibcha linguistic family
and paezano sub-family, coming from the west of Colombia
and Ecuador.
The Atacameño language is not in the andean-ecuatorial
linguistic family, to which the three indigenous languages
spoken in modern continental Chile belong.
The Atacameño people ended up speaking four languages:
they spoke Kunza as their first language until the Spaniards
arrived, along with Aymara, Quechua and Castilian.
With the Hispanic domain, starting from the XVIIth century,
Kunza began to be displaced by Spanish, until losing
its habitual use, during the first decades of the XXth
century.
At the moment, Kunza is practically a dead language,
used only in ceremonies and ritual songs.
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