public_comment: "Due to an epidemic disease in the same decade [1960s] and to the fact that most survivors have intermarried with non-Taushiro speakers and have adopted Spanish or a variety of Quechua, the language is now on the brink of extinction with 1 speaker out of an ethnic group of 20 (p.213).",
private_comment: null,
source_id:87998,
preferred: 0,
},
{
id:14137,
code_id:2163,
speaker_number: null,
speaker_number_text: null,
second_language_speakers: null,
semi_speakers: null,
children: null,
young_adults: null,
older_adults: null,
elders: null,
ethnic_population: null,
date_of_info: null,
public_comment: null,
private_comment: null,
source_id:102,
preferred: 0,
},
{
id:30324,
code_id:2163,
speaker_number: "1-9",
speaker_number_text: "1",
second_language_speakers: "",
semi_speakers: "",
children: "",
young_adults: "",
older_adults: "",
elders: "",
ethnic_population: "",
date_of_info: "",
public_comment: "About the single surviving Taushiro speaker: "He is only in his 50s, the youngest member of a family of speakers. And all the evidence that I've come across indicates that he is the sole living speaker."",