Pai Tavytera in Paraguay

Speakers

8,009

Type

Location

Country

Information available

1. Basics

Names

Pai Tavytera in Paraguay

Size

8,009

2. Status

Status

  • Official country wide language
  • Official regional language
  • Official minority language
  • Recognised community language
  • Unrecognised community language
National language
No
Indigenous language
No
Administrative units of the country
Departments of Amambay Concepción.

3. State

Documentation: materials

Written

  • Extended corpora
  • Annotated corpora
  • Corpus/corpora
  • Materials/corpus
  • Some materials
  • No materials
Digital
Yes

divider

Video

Digital

divider

Audio

Digital
Yes

divider

Documentation: descriptions

  • Elaborated dictionaries, grammars, statistical language models, etc.
  • Dictionaries and grammars
  • Dictionary and grammar
  • Glossary and descriptions
  • Few descriptions
  • No descriptions

Standardization

  • Modern standard language
  • Young standard language
  • Standardised language
  • Quasi-standard language
  • Semi-standardised language
  • Un-standardised language

Graphisation & script encoding

  • Standardised writing system with full script encoding
  • Conventionalised writing system with partial script encoding
  • Consistent writing system with no script encoding
  • Unsystematic writing system(s)
  • Limited written use
  • No written use

4. Users

Geographical distribution

  • Users live and dominate in all regions of the country
  • Users live in one [state/...] of the country
  • Users live in a cross-border region [state/...] of the country
  • Users live in separated [states/...] of the country
  • Users live dispersed across one [state/...] of the country
  • Users live scattered all over the country

Settlements

  • Rural
  • Urban

Size / Number of users

Number of users

8009
Source
census
Year
2012

Users within total population

0.00000
Less than 1% use the language

PROPORTION

Actual percentage
0
Source
census, 2012

Users within the reference community

Age distribution of users

4,905
61
percentage of members of middle generations (15-65)
Source

census, 2012

Age distribution of users

2,852
36
percentage of members of young generations (< 15)
Source

census, 2012

Age distribution of users

252
3
percentage of members of older generations (> 65)
Source

census, 2012

Generational use

All generations

Educational attainment

48
52
3,840
No education
Source

census, 2012

50
50
168
Early childhood education
Source

census, 2012

53
47
3,569
Primary education
Source

census, 2012

49
51
113
Lower secondary education
Source

census, 2012

41
59
27
Higher secondary education
Source

census, 2012

68
32
28
Tertiary education
Source

census, 2012

Occupational qualifications

80
20
677
Elementary occupations
Source

census, 2012

100
10
Plant and machine operators and assemblers
Source

census, 2012

93
7
14
Craft and related trades workers
Source

census, 2012

58
42
2,912
Skilled agricultural, forestry and fishery workers
Source

census, 2012

33
67
30
Services and sales workers
Source

census, 2012

Clerical support workers
Source

census, 2012

50
50
18
Technicians and associate professionals
Source

census, 2012

69
31
13
Professionals
Source

census, 2012

67
33
6
Managers
Source

census, 2012

Language competence

Language not used
Understand little, speak/sign none
Understand some, speak/sign little
Understand well, speak/sign some
Understand all, speak/sign well
Understand all, speak/sign fluently

Literacy of users

Less than 50% of users with literacy in the language
Source

census, 2012

Digital use

5. Use

Socio-geographic dimension

Geographic scope
  • International
  • Supranational
  • Cross-border (states)
  • State-wide
  • Supra-regional cross-border
  • Supra-regional
  • Regional cross-border
  • Regional
  • Local
Source
In the Oriental region

Economic dimension

Functional dimension

Functional scope
  • Public domains
  • Everyday domains
  • Private domains
Functional scope
  • Public domains
  • Everyday domains
  • Private domains
Nature
exclusive
Stability
Decreasing
Functional scope
  • Public domains
  • Everyday domains
  • Private domains

Functional use in administration

Types of language use

Ethnoculture

Formal Education

Early childhood education
Primary level
Lower secondary level
Higher secondary level
Tertiary level

Public healthcare

Information, communication and cultural production

Completion