Quecha may refer to two different groups of Native American peoples and languages: Quechan, people who live on the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation in Arizona...
Quechan or Kwtsaan (/kʷt͡sa:n/, Kwatsáan Iiyáa), also known as Yuma, is the native language of the Quechan people of southeastern California and southwestern...
write Quechua languages Quechua Wikipedia, a language edition of Wikipedia Quecha (disambiguation) Kʼicheʼ language Qʼeqchiʼ language This disambiguation...
trenecuador.com. Retrieved 29 September 2019. "How did Cotopaxi get its Quecha name?". cozine.com. 1 June 1998. Archived from the original on 31 March...
glabrescens. As of July 2023[update], it is the only species in the genus Quecha. "Quechua glabrescens (T.Hashim.) Salazar & L.Jost", Plants of the World...
particularly between Salvador as a white resident of Lima and Madeinusa as a Quecha indigenous rural villager. The film also employs up-close shots and views...
came about in 2002. Morales said that it "was a trial against Aymara and Quechas". MAS activists interpreted it as evidence of the pseudo-democratic credentials...
have their origin in Quechuan languages. According to the 2010 census, the Quecha People would be composed of 55,493 people only in Argentina. The 2010 National...
from a vernacular name. One explanation is that it is derived from the Quecha word sacha, meaning 'tree' or 'woods', hence 'tree rose' or 'woods rose'...
heads of his livestock had been taken by the Pimas and Maricopas. The Quechas, were now threatening the train so immediately upon receiving the message...
Academies. Although the law did not mention the name "High Academy of the Quecha Language," the law marked the beginning of the AMLQ's transition to its...
in the native language of Quechua or Quichua (depending on the area). In Quecha, the Andean people call themselves runa cuna loosely translating to people...