Four languages are considered to definitively belong to the Charruan language family, basically Chañá (Lanték), Nbeuá, Charrúa and Guenoa. Nbeuá is thought to be a dialect of Chaná. A fourth language,
Balomar, is claimed to exist by Loukotka (1968), but there is no data on it. •
Charruan languages •
Chaná () • Chaná proper • "Mbeguá", "Beguá", or "Chaná-Beguá" • "Timbúes", "Chaná Timbúes", "Timbó", or "Chaná timbó" •
Charrúa •
Güenoa (Minuan) •
Balomar (unattested) A number of unattested languages are also presumed to belong to the Charruan family: •
Bohane – spoken near
Maldonado, or
Salto, in
Uruguay •
Calchine – spoken in
Santa Fe Province, Argentina, along the
Salado River •
Caracañá – spoken along the Caracañá River, Santa Fe •
Chaná-Mbegua or
Begua – spoken on the
Paraná River between
Crespo and
Victoria •
Colastiné – spoken in Santa Fe Province near Colastiné •
Corondá – spoken in
Coronda, Santa Fe Province •
Guaiquiaré – spoken in Entre Ríos on the Arroyo Guaiquiraré •
Mocoreta or
Macurendá or
Mocolete – spoken along the
Mocoretá River in
Entre Ríos Province •
Pairindi – spoken in Entre Ríos from
Corrientes to the
Feliciano River •
Timbu – spoken in
Gaboto, Santa Fe Province •
Yaro – spoken in Uruguay between the
Río Negro and the
San Salvador River ==Genetic relations==