Máku is an unclassified language and likely language isolate, known natively as Jukude, and was formerly spoken on the Brazil–Venezuela border in Roraima along the upper Uraricoera and lower Auari rivers, west of Boa Vista, by the Jukudeitse or 'people'. The last speaker, Kuluta, died in 2000. There are currently no speakers or rememberers of the language and no one identifies as Jukude today. Aryon Rodrigues and Ernesto Migliazza, as well as Iraguacema Lima Maciel, worked on the language, and the data was collected into a grammar by Chris Rogers and published in 2020.

Máku is an unclassified language and likely language isolate, known natively as Jukude, and was formerly spoken on the Brazil–Venezuela border in Roraima along the upper Uraricoera and lower Auari rivers, west of Boa Vista, by the Jukudeitse or 'people'. The last speaker, Kuluta, died in 2000. There are currently no speakers or rememberers of the language and no one identifies as Jukude today. Aryon Rodrigues and Ernesto Migliazza, as well as Iraguacema Lima Maciel, worked on the language, and the data was collected into a grammar by Chris Rogers and published in 2020.

Máku is an unclassified language and likely language isolate, known natively as Jukude, and was formerly spoken on the Brazil–Venezuela border in Roraima along the upper Uraricoera and lower Auari rivers, west of Boa Vista, by the Jukudeitse or 'people'. The last speaker, Kuluta, died in 2000. There are currently no speakers or rememberers of the language and no one identifies as Jukude today. Aryon Rodrigues and Ernesto Migliazza, as well as Iraguacema Lima Maciel, worked on the language, and the data was collected into a grammar by Chris Rogers and published in 2020.

Máku is an unclassified language and likely language isolate, known natively as Jukude, and was formerly spoken on the Brazil–Venezuela border in Roraima along the upper Uraricoera and lower Auari rivers, west of Boa Vista, by the Jukudeitse or 'people'. The last speaker, Kuluta, died in 2000. There are currently no speakers or rememberers of the language and no one identifies as Jukude today. Aryon Rodrigues and Ernesto Migliazza, as well as Iraguacema Lima Maciel, worked on the language, and the data was collected into a grammar by Chris Rogers and published in 2020.

Máku is an unclassified language and likely language isolate, known natively as Jukude, and was formerly spoken on the Brazil–Venezuela border in Roraima along the upper Uraricoera and lower Auari rivers, west of Boa Vista, by the Jukudeitse or 'people'. The last speaker, Kuluta, died in 2000. There are currently no speakers or rememberers of the language and no one identifies as Jukude today. Aryon Rodrigues and Ernesto Migliazza, as well as Iraguacema Lima Maciel, worked on the language, and the data was collected into a grammar by Chris Rogers and published in 2020.

Máku is an unclassified language and likely language isolate, known natively as Jukude, and was formerly spoken on the Brazil–Venezuela border in Roraima along the upper Uraricoera and lower Auari rivers, west of Boa Vista, by the Jukudeitse or 'people'. The last speaker, Kuluta, died in 2000. There are currently no speakers or rememberers of the language and no one identifies as Jukude today. Aryon Rodrigues and Ernesto Migliazza, as well as Iraguacema Lima Maciel, worked on the language, and the data was collected into a grammar by Chris Rogers and published in 2020.

Máku is an unclassified language and likely language isolate, known natively as Jukude, and was formerly spoken on the Brazil–Venezuela border in Roraima along the upper Uraricoera and lower Auari rivers, west of Boa Vista, by the Jukudeitse or 'people'. The last speaker, Kuluta, died in 2000. There are currently no speakers or rememberers of the language and no one identifies as Jukude today. Aryon Rodrigues and Ernesto Migliazza, as well as Iraguacema Lima Maciel, worked on the language, and the data was collected into a grammar by Chris Rogers and published in 2020.

Máku is an unclassified language and likely language isolate, known natively as Jukude, and was formerly spoken on the Brazil–Venezuela border in Roraima along the upper Uraricoera and lower Auari rivers, west of Boa Vista, by the Jukudeitse or 'people'. The last speaker, Kuluta, died in 2000. There are currently no speakers or rememberers of the language and no one identifies as Jukude today. Aryon Rodrigues and Ernesto Migliazza, as well as Iraguacema Lima Maciel, worked on the language, and the data was collected into a grammar by Chris Rogers and published in 2020.

Máku is an unclassified language and likely language isolate, known natively as Jukude, and was formerly spoken on the Brazil–Venezuela border in Roraima along the upper Uraricoera and lower Auari rivers, west of Boa Vista, by the Jukudeitse or 'people'. The last speaker, Kuluta, died in 2000. There are currently no speakers or rememberers of the language and no one identifies as Jukude today. Aryon Rodrigues and Ernesto Migliazza, as well as Iraguacema Lima Maciel, worked on the language, and the data was collected into a grammar by Chris Rogers and published in 2020.