The Pekodian languages are a subgroup of the Cariban language family. The languages are spoken in Mato Grosso and Pará states of Brazil and make up the southernmost branch of Cariban.
Meira and Chousou-Polydouri (2015) consider Pekodian to have descended from Cariban migrations that came from the north, as Cariban linguistic diversity is concentrated in northern South America.
The term Pekodian was coined in 2005 by Sérgio Meira and Bruna Franchetto on the basis of a cognate word for âÂÂwomanâ found in these languages, respectively Bakairi pekodo and Ikpeng petkom, but not found in any of the other Cariban languages compared against them.
The Pekodian languages are:
Carvalho classifies the Pekodian languages as follows.
The term Kampot is coined by Carvalho (2020) from the lexical innovation *kampot âÂÂfireâ defining the dialect cluster.
A number of sound changes are shared between BakairÃÂ and Ikpeng:
Pekodian languages have various loanwords from non-Cariban languages, including Juruna and Arawakan languages.
Pekodian may have also influenced Bororoan and other non-Cariban language families.