Piro Pueblo language
Piro is a poorly attested, extinct Tanoan language once spoken in the more than twenty Piro Pueblos near Socorro, New Mexico.[2] It has generally been classified as one of the Tiwa languages,[3] though Leap (1971) contested whether or not Piro is truly a Tanoan language at all.[4]
| Piro | |
|---|---|
| Native to | United States | 
| Region | New Mexico | 
| Ethnicity | Piro | 
| Extinct | by 1900[1] | 
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | pie | 
pie | |
| Glottolog | piro1248 | 
| Linguasphere | 64-CAA-c | 
References
    
- Piro at MultiTree on the Linguist List
 - Harrington, John P. (1909) "Notes on the Piro Language" American Anthropologist New Series, 11(4):563–594
 - Newman, Stanley (1954) "American Indian Linguistics in the Southwest" American Anthropologist New Series, 56(4): pp. 626-634, 631
 - Leap, William L. (1971) "Who Were the Piro?" Anthropological Linguistics 13: pp. 321-330
 
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