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Ay muchas cosas. Yo creo que depende si es un poder permanente o algo de una sola vez. De todas formas, lo primero que haría sería dormir y dormir mucho! Después ir a sapear por ahí :B
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Actually, I know a lot, or at least enough. I'm very interested in my country's original inhabitants :B
The Mapuche people is the largest and most important ethnic group in Chile. Did you know they fought 300 years against the Spanish conquerors? They are so brave and proud! Still in these days they fight for their land with all they have. It's sad they get their land deforested and occupied by people who are only interested in making money and don't care about our native people or the environment :(
Most place names in the south are Mapuche words, as well as some words used in every day Chilean Spanish, like "quiltro" (stray dog or mix race dog) and "pichintún" (little bit)
The original people living in the region I live are the Lickan-antai (or Atacamas), they almost never expanded and their language (Kunza) is extinct now. Same with the Changos,who lived by the cost. Aymara and Quechua are also still present in this region (the north of Chile), and their language is still spoken by a few people.
More to the south, the Diaguitas and Kollas, but they're extinct now.
In the centre and south, the Mapuches were and still are the largest group. According to their location, they were either Picunches (people of the north), Huilliches (people of the south), Lafkenches (people of the cost) and Pehuenches (people of the pehuén)
Now, in the very south, there were Yámanas, Kawesqar, Aonikenk and Selk'nam. They're all almost extinct now, same as their languages. They lived in the southernmost part of Chile and the world.
And that's pretty much the "ethnic map" of Chile, by me (: -
Ahahaha, si, es verdad, es rico. Aunque no sé quién es, aparte de que es tu esposo (porque estoy segura que eres tú, loca xd)
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Não, eu nunca quebrei um osso.
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