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Indigenous languages of the Americas

Over a thousand indigenous languages are spoken by the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. These languages cannot all be demonstrated to be related to each other and are classified into a hundred or so language families (including a large number of language isolates), as well as a number of extinct languages that are unclassified because of a lack of data.

Yucatec Maya writing in the Dresden Codex, ca. 11–12th century, Chichen Itza

Many proposals have been made to relate some or all of these languages to each other, with varying degrees of success. The best known is Joseph Greenberg's Amerind hypothesis,[1] which nearly all specialists reject because of methodological flaws; spurious data; and a failure to distinguish cognation, contact, and coincidence.[2] Nonetheless, there are indications that some of the recognized families are related to each other, such as widespread similarities in pronouns (e.g., n/m is a common pattern for 'I'/'you' across western North America, and ch/k/t for 'I'/'you'/'we' is similarly found in a more limited region of South America).

According to UNESCO, most of the Indigenous languages of the Americas are critically endangered, and many are dormant (without native speakers but with a community of heritage-language users) or entirely extinct.[3][4] The most widely spoken Indigenous languages are Southern Quechua (spoken primarily in southern Peru and Bolivia) and Guarani (centered in Paraguay, where it is the national language), with perhaps six or seven million speakers apiece (including many of European descent in the case of Guarani). Only half a dozen others have more than a million speakers; these are Aymara of Bolivia and Nahuatl of Mexico, with almost two million each; the Mayan languages Kekchi, Quiché, and Yucatec of Guatemala and Mexico, with about 1 million apiece; and perhaps one or two additional Quechuan languages in Peru and Ecuador. In the United States, 372,000 people reported speaking an Indigenous language at home in the 2010 census,[5] and similarly in Canada, 133,000 people reported speaking an Indigenous language at home in the 2011 census.[6] In Greenland, about 90% of the population speaks Greenlandic, the most widely spoken Eskimo–Aleut language.

Background

Over a thousand known languages were spoken by various peoples in North and South America prior to their first contact with Europeans. These encounters occurred between the beginning of the 11th century (with the Nordic settlement of Greenland and failed efforts in Newfoundland and Labrador) and the end of the 15th century (the voyages of Christopher Columbus). Several Indigenous cultures of the Americas had also developed their own writing systems,[7] the best known being the Maya script.[8] The Indigenous languages of the Americas had widely varying demographics, from the Quechuan languages, Aymara, Guarani, and Nahuatl, which had millions of active speakers, to many languages with only several hundred speakers. After pre-Columbian times, several Indigenous creole languages developed in the Americas, based on European, Indigenous and African languages.

The European colonizers and their successor states had widely varying attitudes towards Native American languages. In Brazil, friars learned and promoted the Tupi language.[9] In many Spanish colonies, Spanish missionaries often learned local languages and culture in order to preach to the natives in their own tongue and relate the Christian message to their Indigenous religions. In the British American colonies, John Eliot of the Massachusetts Bay Colony translated the Bible into the Massachusett language, also called Wampanoag, or Natick (1661–1663); he published the first Bible printed in North America, the Eliot Indian Bible.

The Europeans also suppressed use of Indigenous languages, establishing their own languages for official communications, destroying texts in other languages, and insisting that Indigenous people learn European languages in schools. As a result, Indigenous languages suffered from cultural suppression and loss of speakers. By the 18th and 19th centuries, Spanish, English, Portuguese, French, and Dutch, brought to the Americas by European settlers and administrators, had become the official or national languages of modern nation-states of the Americas.

Many Indigenous languages have become critically endangered, but others are vigorous and part of daily life for millions of people. Several Indigenous languages have been given official status in the countries where they occur, such as Guaraní in Paraguay. In other cases official status is limited to certain regions where the languages are most spoken. Although sometimes enshrined in constitutions as official, the languages may be used infrequently in de facto official use. Examples are Quechua in Peru and Aymara in Bolivia, where in practice, Spanish is dominant in all formal contexts.

In the North American Arctic region, Greenland in 2009 adopted Kalaallisut[10] as its sole official language. In the United States, the Navajo language is the most spoken Native American language, with more than 200,000 speakers in the Southwestern United States. The US Marine Corps recruited Navajo men, who were established as code talkers during World War II.

Origins

In American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America (1997), Lyle Campbell lists several hypotheses for the historical origins of Amerindian languages.[11]

  • A single, one-language migration (not widely accepted)
  • A few linguistically distinct migrations (favored by Edward Sapir)
  • Multiple migrations
  • Multilingual migrations (single migration with multiple languages)
  • The influx of already diversified but related languages from the Old World
  • Extinction of Old World linguistic relatives (while the New World ones survived)
  • Migration along the Pacific coast instead of by the Bering Strait

Roger Blench (2008) has advocated the theory of multiple migrations along the Pacific coast of peoples from northeastern Asia, who already spoke diverse languages. These proliferated in the New World.[12]

Numbers of speakers and political recognition

Countries like Mexico, Bolivia, Venezuela, Guatemala, and Guyana recognize all or most Indigenous languages native to their respective countries, with Bolivia and Venezuela elevating all Indigenous languages to official language status according to their constitutions. Colombia delegates local Indigenous language recognition to the department level according to the Colombian Constitution of 1991. Countries like Canada, Argentina, and the United States allow their respective provinces and states to determine their own language recognition policies. Indigenous language recognition in Brazil is limited to their localities.

  • Bullet points represent minority language status. Political entities with official language status are highlighted in bold.
List of Widely Spoken and Officially Recognized Languages
Language Number of speakers Official Recognition Area(s) Language is spoken Source
Guaraní 6,500,000 Paraguay (Official Language)

Bolivia

Corrientes, Argentina

Tacuru, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil

Mercosur

Paraguay, Bolivia, Argentina, Brazil [13]
Southern Quechua 5,000,000 (outdated figure) Bolivia (Official Language)

Peru (Official Language)

Jujuy, Argentina

  • Chile

Comunidad Andina

Bolivia, Peru, Argentina, Chile [14]
Nahuatl 1,700,000 Mexico Mexico [15]
Aymara 1,700,000 Bolivia (Official Language)

Peru (Official Language)

  • Chile

Comunidad Andina

Bolivia, Peru, Chile [16]
Qʼeqchiʼ 1,100,000 Guatemala

Belize

Mexico

Guatemala, Belize, Mexico [17]
Kʼicheʼ 1,100,000 Guatemala

Mexico

Guatemala & Mexico [18]
Yucatec Maya 890,000 Mexico

Belize

Mexico & Belize [19]
Ancash Quechua 700,000 (outdated figure) Peru [20]
Mam 600,000 Guatemala

Mexico

Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities (De facto), Mexico

Guatemala & Mexico
Tzeltal 560,000 Mexico

Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities (De facto), Mexico

Mexico [21]
Mixtec 520,000 Mexico Mexico [22]
Tzotzil 490,000 Mexico

Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities (De facto), Mexico

Mexico [23]
Zapotec 480,000 Mexico Mexico [24]
Kichwa 450,000 Ecuador

Colombia (Cauca, Nariño, Putumayo)

Ecuador & Colombia (Cauca, Nariño, Putumayo) [25]
Wayuu (Guajiro) 420,000 Venezuela

La Guajira, Colombia

Venezuela & Colombia
Kaqchikel 410,000 Guatemala

Mexico

Guatemala & Mexico [26]
Otomi 310,000 Mexico Mexico [27]
Totonac 270,000 Mexico Mexico [28]
Mapuche 260,000 Cautín Province, La Araucanía, Chile (Galvarino, Padre Las Casas) Cautín Province, La Araucanía, Chile (Galvarino, Padre Las Casas) [29]
Ch'ol 250,000 Mexico

Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities (De facto), Mexico

Mexico [30]
Mazateco 240,000 Mexico Mexico [31]
Qʼanjobʼal 170,000 Guatemala

Mexico

Guatemala & Mexico
Huasteco 170,000 Mexico Mexico [32]
Navajo 170,000 Navajo Nation, United States Southwestern US [33]
Mazahua 150,000 Mexico Mexico [34]
Miskito 140,000 (outdated figure) North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region, Nicaragua

Honduras (Gracias a Dios)

Nicaragua, Honduras
Chinanteco 140,000 Mexico Mexico [35]
Mixe 130,000 Mexico Mexico [36]
Tlapaneco 130,000 Mexico Mexico [37]
Poqomchiʼ 130,000 Guatemala Guatemala
Purepecha/Tarasco 120,000 Mexico Mexico [38]
Achí 120,000 Guatemala Guatemala
Ixil 120,000 Guatemala

Mexico

Guatemala & Mexico
Yaru Quechua 100,000 (circa; outdated figure) Peru [39]
Cree 96,000 [incl. Naskapi, Montagnais] Northwest Territories, Canada Canada [40]
Tarahumara 74,000 Mexico Mexico
Tz’utujil 72,000 Guatemala Guatemala
Kuna 61,000 Colombia (Chocó & Antioquia) Colombia (Chocó & Antioquia)
Paez 60,000 Colombia (Cauca, Huila, Valle del Cauca) Colombia (Cauca, Huila, Valle del Cauca)
Chuj 59,000 Guatemala

Mexico

Guatemala & Mexico
Kalaallisut 57,000 Greenland Greenland [41]
Amuzgo 55,588 Mexico Mexico
Tojolabʼal 51,733 Mexico

Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities (De facto), Mexico

Mexico
Garífuna 50,000 (circa; outdated figure) Guatemala

Belize

North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region, Nicaragua

Honduras (Atlántida, Colón, Gracias a Dios)

Guatemala, Belize, Nicaragua, Honduras [42]
Ojibwe 48,000 Canada

United States

Canada & United States [43]
Tikuna 47,000 Colombia (Leticia, Puerto Nariño, Amazonas) Amazonas regions of Brazil and Colombia [44]
Chatino 45,000 Mexico Mexico
Huichol 44,800 Mexico Mexico
Mayo 39,600 Mexico Mexico
Inuktitut 39,475 Nunavut, Canada

Northwest Territories, Canada

Nunavut, Northwest Territories, Quebec and Labrador, Canada [45]
Chontal Maya 37,072 Mexico Mexico
Wichi 36,135 Chaco, Argentina Chaco, Argentina
Tepehuán 36,000 Mexico Mexico
Soteapanec 35,050 Mexico Mexico
Shuar 35,000 Ecuador Ecuador [46]
Blackfoot 34,394 Alberta, Canada & Montana, US [47]
Sikuani 34,000 Colombia (Meta, Vichada, Arauca, Guainía, Guaviare) Colombia (Meta, Vichada, Arauca, Guainía, Guaviare)
Jakaltek 33,000 Guatemala

Mexico

Guatemala & Mexico
Kom 31,580 Chaco, Argentina Chaco, Argentina
Poqomam 30,000 Guatemala Guatemala
Ch'orti' 30,000 Guatemala Guatemala
Kaiwá 26,500 Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil [44]
Sioux 25,000 South Dakota, United States US [48]
Oʼodham 23,313 Tohono Oʼodham Nation, United States

Salt River Pima–Maricopa Indian Community, United States

Mexico

Arizona, US
Kaigang 22,000 Brazil [44]
Guambiano 21,000 Cauca Department, Colombia Cauca Department, Colombia
Cora 20,100 Mexico Mexico
Yanomamö 20,000 Venezuela Brazil & Venezuela [44]
Nheengatu 19,000 São Gabriel da Cachoeira, Amazonas, Brazil

Venezuela

Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela [49]
Yup'ik (Central Alaskan) & (Siberian) 18,626 Alaska, United States Alaska, United States
Huave 17,900 Mexico Mexico [50]
Yaqui 17,546 Mexico Mexico
Piaroa 17,000 Vichada, Colombia Vichada, Colombia
Sakapultek 15,000 Guatemala Guatemala
Western Apache 14,012 San Carlos Apache Nation, United States

Fort Apache Indian Reservation, United States

Arizona, US
Xavante 13,300 Mato Grosso, Brazil [44]
Keresan 13,073 New Mexico, US
Cuicatec 13,000 Mexico Mexico
Awa Pit 13,000 Nariño Department, Colombia Nariño Department, Colombia
Cherokee 12,320 Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, North Carolina, United States

Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, United States

US (Oklahoma & North Carolina)
Karu 12,000 Venezuela

Guaviare Department, Colombia

São Gabriel da Cachoeira, Amazonas, Brazil, (Baníwa language)

Guaviare, Colombia & Amazonas, Brazil, (Baníwa language)
Awakatek 11,607 Guatemala

Mexico

Guatemala

Mexico

Chipewyan 11,325 Northwest Territories, Canada Northwest Territories, Canada [51]
Pame 11,000 Mexico Mexico
Wounaan 10,800 Colombia (Chocó, Cauca, Valle del Cauca) Colombia (Chocó, Cauca, Valle del Cauca)
Choctaw 10,368 Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, United States Oklahoma & Mississippi, US [52]
Moxo 10,000 Bolivia Bolivia
Kogi 9,900 Magdalena, Colombia Magdalena, Colombia
Zuñi 9,620 New Mexico, US [53]
Guajajara 9,500 Maranhão, Brazil [44]
Sumo 9,000 North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region, Nicaragua North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region, Nicaragua
Mopán 9,000–12,000 Guatemala

Belize

Guatemala & Belize [54]
Tepehua 8,900 Mexico Mexico
Mawé 8,900 Brazil (Para & Amazonas) [44]
Terêna 8,200 Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil [44]
Sipakapense 8,000 Guatemala Guatemala
Ika 8,000 Colombia (Cesar & Magdalena) Colombia (Cesar & Magdalena)
Tukano 7,100 São Gabriel da Cachoeira, Amazonas, Brazil
Mitú, Vaupés, Colombia
Amazonas, Brazil & Vaupés, Colombia [47]
Minica Huitoto 6,800 Amazonas, Colombia Amazonas, Colombia
Hopi 6,780 Arizona, US [55]
Piapoco 6,400 Colombia (Guainía, Vichada, Meta) Colombia (Guainía, Vichada, Meta)
Cubeo 6,300 Vaupés, Colombia Vaupés, Colombia
Kayapo 6,200 Brazil (Pará & Mato Grosso) [47]
Yukpa 6,000 Venezuela

Cesar, Colombia

Venezuela, Colombia
Chiquitano 5,900 Bolivia Brazil & Bolivia
Guarayu 5,900 Bolivia Bolivia
Macushi 5,800 Venezuela

Guyana

Brazil, Venezuela, Guyana [47]
Chimané 5,300 Bolivia Bolivia
Tewa 5,123 New Mexico, US
Timbira 5,100 Brazil (Maranhão, Tocantins, Pará) [56]
Sanumá 5,100 Venezuel Brazil & Venezuela [57]
Muscogee 5,072 Muscogee (Creek) Nation, OK, United States US (Oklahoma, Alabama, Florida) [58]
Chontal of Oaxaca 5,039 Mexico Mexico [59]
Tektitek 5,000 Guatemala Guatemala
Barí 5,000 Colombia (Cesar & Norte de Santander) Colombia (Cesar & Norte de Santander)
Camsá 4,000 Putumayo, Colombia Putumayo, Colombia
Kulina 3,900 Brazil (Amazonas) & Peru [57]
Crow 3,862 Montana, US
Mohawk 3,875 Mohawk Nation of Akwesasne, Canada Canada (Ontario & Quebec) and US (New York) [60][61]
Kashinawa 3,588 Brazil & Peru
Munduruku 3,563 Pará & Amazonas, Brazil [57]
Tunebo/Uwa 3,550 Boyacá, Colombia Boyacá, Colombia
Ayoreo 3,160 Bolivia Bolivia
Desano 3,160 Bolivia Bolivia
Wapishana 3,154 Bonfim, Roraima, Brazil

Guyana

Bonfim, Roraima, Brazil

Guyana

[62][57]
Yaminawa 3,129 Bolivia Bolivia
Mocoví 3,000 Chaco, Argentina Chaco, Argentina
Iñupiaq 3,000 Alaska, United States

Northwest Territories, Canada

Alaska, United States & Northwest Territories, Canada
Puinave 3,000 Guainía, Colombia

Venezuela

Guainía, Colombia & Venezuela
Cuiba 2,900 Colombia (Casanare, Vichada, Arauca) Colombia (Casanare, Vichada, Arauca)
Tupi-Mondé 2,886 Rondônia, Brazil [57]
Yuracaré 2,700 Bolivia Bolivia
Wanano 2,600 Vaupés, Colombia Vaupés, Colombia
Shoshoni 2,512 US
Bora 2,400 Amazonas, Colombia Amazonas, Colombia
Cofán 2,400 Colombia (Nariño, Putumayo) Colombia (Nariño, Putumayo)
Kanamari 2,298 Amazonas, Brazil [57]
Fox (Mesquakie-Sauk-Kickapoo) 2,288 Sac and Fox Nation, United States

Mexico

US & Mexico
Waiwai 2,217 Guyana Brazil, Guyana
Karajá 2,137 Brazil [57]
Huarijio 2,136 Mexico Mexico
Slavey 2,120 Northwest Territories, Canada Northwest Territories, Canada
Chichimeca 2,100 Mexico Mexico
Koreguaje 2,100 Caquetá, Colombia Caquetá, Colombia
Tiriyó 2,100 Brazil, Suriname
Xerente 2,051 Tocantins, Brazil [57]
Uspanteko 2,000 Guatemala Guatemala
Fulniô 1,871 Pernambuco, Brazil [57]
Pakaásnovos (wari) 1,854 Rondônia, Brazil [57]
Wiwa 1,850 Cesar, Colombia Cesar, Colombia
Weenhayek 1,810 Bolivia Bolivia
Matlatzinca 1,800 Mexico Mexico
Tacana 1,800 Bolivia Bolivia
Tłı̨chǫ Yatıì 1,735 Northwest Territories, Canada Northwest Territories, Canada
Cavineña 1,700 Bolivia Bolivia
Jupda 1,700 Amazonas, Colombia Amazonas, Colombia
Zacatepec Mixtec 1,500 Mexico Mexico
Seneca 1,453 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation, Ontario, Canada Ontario, Canada [63]
Movima 1,400 Bolivia Bolivia
Tlingit 1,360 Alaska, United States Alaska, United States
Inuinnaqtun 1,310 Nunavut, Canada

Northwest Territories, Canada

Alaska, United States & Northwest Territories& Nunavut, Canada
Kiowa 1,274 Oklahoma, US
Ka'apor 1,241 Maranhão, Brazil [57]
Aleut 1,236 Alaska, United States Alaska, United States
Gwichʼin 1,217 Alaska, United States

Northwest Territories, Canada

Alaska, United States & Northwest Territories, Canada
Inuvialuktun 1,150 Nunavut, Canada

Northwest Territories, Canada

Nunavut, Canada & Northwest Territories, Canada
Arapaho 1,087 US
Macuna 1,032 Vaupés, Colombia Vaupés, Colombia
Guayabero 1,000 Colombia (Meta, Guaviare) Colombia (Meta, Guaviare)
Comanche 963 US
Chocho 810 Mexico Mexico
Maricopa/Piipaash 800 Salt River Pima–Maricopa Indian Community, AZ, United States Arizona, United States
Rama 740 North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region, Nicaragua North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region, Nicaragua
Seri 729 Mexico Mexico [64]
Ese Ejja 700 Bolivia Bolivia
Nukak 700 Guaviare, Colombia Guaviare, Colombia
Pima Bajo 650 Mexico Mexico
Cayuvava 650 Bolivia Bolivia
Chácobo-Pakawara 600 Bolivia Bolivia
Lacandon 600 Mexico Mexico
Oneida 574 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation, Ontario, Canada

Oneida Nation of the Thames, Ontario, Canada

Ontario, Canada [65][66][67]
Cocopah 515 Mexico Mexico [68]
Sirionó 500 Bolivia Bolivia
Siona 500 Putumayo, Colombia Putumayo, Colombia
Havasupai–Hualapai 445 Havasupai Indian Reservation, AZ, United States Arizona, US [69]
Kumeyaay 427 (525 including Ipai and Tiipai languages) Mexico Baja California, Mexico & California, US [70][71]
Tembé 420 Maranhão, Brazil [57]
Yurok 414 California, US
Alutiiq/Sugpiaq 400 Alaska, United States Alaska, United States
Tatuyo 400 Vaupés, Colombia Vaupés, Colombia
Andoque 370 Caquetá, Colombia Caquetá, Colombia
Guajá 365 Maranhão, Brazil
Chimila 350 Magdalena, Colombia Magdalena, Colombia
Koyukon 300 Alaska, United States Alaska, United States
Hitnü 300 Arauca, Colombia Arauca, Colombia
Mikasuki 290 Georgia and Florida, US [72]
Quechan 290 California & Arizona, US [73]
Cabiyari 270 Colombia (Mirití-Paraná & Amazonas) Colombia (Mirití-Paraná & Amazonas)
Reyesano 250 Bolivia Bolivia
Achagua 250 Meta, Colombia Meta, Colombia
Kakwa 250 Vaupés, Colombia Vaupés, Colombia
Yavapai 245 Arizona, US [74]
Siriano 220 Vaupés, Colombia Vaupés, Colombia
Mojave 200 Arizona, US [75]
Paipai 200 Mexico Mexico [76]
Toromono 200 Bolivia Bolivia
Ixcatec 190 Mexico Mexico
Ocaina 190 Amazonas, Colombia Amazonas, Colombia
Haida 168 Alaska, United States

Council of the Haida Nation, Canada

Alaska, US and British Columbia, Canada
Muinane 150 Amazonas, Colombia Amazonas, Colombia
Deg Xinag 127 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Warázu 125 Bolivia Bolivia
Araona 110 Bolivia Bolivia
Upper Tanana 100 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Itene 90 Bolivia Bolivia
Ahtna 80 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Tsimshian 70 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Tanacross 65 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Cayuga 61 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation, Ontario, Canada

Cattaraugus Reservation, New York, United States

Ontario, Canada, and New York, US [77]
Denaʼina 50 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Onondaga 50 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation, ON, Canada Ontario, Canada [78]
Bauré 40 Bolivia Bolivia
Upper Kuskokwim 40 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Tanana 30 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Ayapaneco 24 Mexico Mexico [79]
Leco 20 Bolivia Bolivia
Xincan 16 Guatemala Guatemala
Hän 12 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Holikachuk 12 Alaska, United States Alaska, US
Carijona 6 Colombia (Amazonas, Guaviare) Colombia (Amazonas, Guaviare)
Itonama 5 Bolivia Bolivia
Kiliwa 4 Mexico Mexico
Nonuya 2 Amazonas, Colombia Colombia, Peru
Taíno languages 0 Formerly all of the Caribbean
Cochimí 0 Mexico (Extinct, but retains recognition)
Kallawaya 0 Bolivia (Extinct, but retains recognition)
Eyak 0 Alaska, United States (Extinct, but retains recognition)
Tuscarora 0 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation, Ontario, Canada
Tuscarora Reservation, New York, United States
Ontario, Canada, and New York, US [80]

Language families and unclassified languages

Notes:

  • Extinct languages or families are indicated by: .
  • The number of family members is indicated in parentheses (for example, Arauan (9) means the Arauan family consists of nine languages).
  • For convenience, the following list of language families is divided into three sections based on political boundaries of countries. These sections correspond roughly with the geographic regions (North, Central, and South America) but are not equivalent. This division cannot fully delineate Indigenous culture areas.

Northern America

 
Pre-contact: distribution of North American language families, including northern Mexico
 
Bilingual stop sign in English and the Cherokee syllabary (transcription: ᎠᎴᏫᏍᏗᎭ – "alehwisdiha"), Tahlequah, Oklahoma

There are approximately 296 spoken (or formerly spoken) Indigenous languages north of Mexico, 269 of which are grouped into 29 families (the remaining 27 languages are either isolates or unclassified).[citation needed] The Na-Dené, Algic, and Uto-Aztecan families are the largest in terms of number of languages. Uto-Aztecan has the most speakers (1.95 million) if the languages in Mexico are considered (mostly due to 1.5 million speakers of Nahuatl); Na-Dené comes in second with approximately 200,000 speakers (nearly 180,000 of these are speakers of Navajo), and Algic in third with about 180,000 speakers (mainly Cree and Ojibwe). Na-Dené and Algic have the widest geographic distributions: Algic currently spans from northeastern Canada across much of the continent down to northeastern Mexico (due to later migrations of the Kickapoo) with two outliers in California (Yurok and Wiyot); Na-Dené spans from Alaska and western Canada through Washington, Oregon, and California to the U.S. Southwest and northern Mexico (with one outlier in the Plains). Several families consist of only 2 or 3 languages. Demonstrating genetic relationships has proved difficult due to the great linguistic diversity present in North America. Two large (super-) family proposals, Penutian and Hokan, look particularly promising. However, even after decades of research, a large number of families remain.

North America is notable for its linguistic diversity, especially in California. This area has 18 language families comprising 74 languages (compared to four families in Europe: Indo-European, Uralic, Turkic, and Afroasiatic and one isolate, Basque).[81]

Another area of considerable diversity appears to have been the Southeastern Woodlands;[citation needed] however, many of these languages became extinct from European contact and as a result they are, for the most part, absent from the historical record.[citation needed] This diversity has influenced the development of linguistic theories and practice in the US.

Due to the diversity of languages in North America, it is difficult to make generalizations for the region. Most North American languages have a relatively small number of vowels (i.e. three to five vowels). Languages of the western half of North America often have relatively large consonant inventories. The languages of the Pacific Northwest are notable for their complex phonotactics (for example, some languages have words that lack vowels entirely).[82] The languages of the Plateau area have relatively rare pharyngeals and epiglottals (they are otherwise restricted to Afroasiatic languages and the languages of the Caucasus). Ejective consonants are also common in western North America, although they are rare elsewhere (except, again, for the Caucasus region, parts of Africa, and the Mayan family).

Head-marking is found in many languages of North America (as well as in Central and South America), but outside of the Americas it is rare. Many languages throughout North America are polysynthetic (Eskimo–Aleut languages are extreme examples), although this is not characteristic of all North American languages (contrary to what was believed by 19th-century linguists). Several families have unique traits, such as the inverse number marking of the Tanoan languages, the lexical affixes of the Wakashan, Salishan and Chimakuan languages, and the unusual verb structure of Na-Dené.

The classification below is a composite of Goddard (1996), Campbell (1997), and Mithun (1999).

Central America and Mexico

 
The Indigenous languages of Mexico that have more than 100,000 speakers

In Central America the Mayan languages are among those used today. Mayan languages are spoken by at least 6 million Indigenous Maya, primarily in Guatemala, Mexico, Belize and Honduras. In 1996, Guatemala formally recognized 21 Mayan languages by name, and Mexico recognizes eight more. The Mayan language family is one of the best documented and most studied in the Americas. Modern Mayan languages descend from Proto-Mayan, a language thought to have been spoken at least 4,000 years ago; it has been partially reconstructed using the comparative method.

South America and the Caribbean

 
Some of the greater families of South America: dark spots are language isolates or quasi-isolate, grey spots unclassified languages or languages with doubtful classification. (Note that Quechua, the family with most speakers, is not displayed.)
 
A Urarina shaman, 1988

Although both North and Central America are very diverse areas, South America has a linguistic diversity rivalled by only a few other places in the world with approximately 350 languages still spoken and several hundred more spoken at first contact but now extinct. The situation of language documentation and classification into genetic families is not as advanced as in North America (which is relatively well studied in many areas). Kaufman (1994: 46) gives the following appraisal:

Since the mid 1950s, the amount of published material on SA [South America] has been gradually growing, but even so, the number of researchers is far smaller than the growing number of linguistic communities whose speech should be documented. Given the current employment opportunities, it is not likely that the number of specialists in SA Indian languages will increase fast enough to document most of the surviving SA languages before they go out of use, as most of them unavoidably will. More work languishes in personal files than is published, but this is a standard problem.

It is fair to say that SA and New Guinea are linguistically the poorest documented parts of the world. However, in the early 1960s fairly systematic efforts were launched in Papua New Guinea, and that area – much smaller than SA, to be sure – is in general much better documented than any part of Indigenous SA of comparable size.

As a result, many relationships between languages and language families have not been determined and some of those relationships that have been proposed are on somewhat shaky ground.

The list of language families, isolates, and unclassified languages below is a rather conservative one based on Campbell (1997). Many of the proposed (and often speculative) groupings of families can be seen in Campbell (1997), Gordon (2005), Kaufman (1990, 1994), Key (1979), Loukotka (1968), and in the Language stock proposals section below.

Language stock proposals

Hypothetical language-family proposals of American languages are often cited as uncontroversial in popular writing. However, many of these proposals have not been fully demonstrated, or even demonstrated at all. Some proposals are viewed by specialists in a favorable light, believing that genetic relationships are very likely to be established in the future (for example, the Penutian stock). Other proposals are more controversial with many linguists believing that some genetic relationships of a proposal may be demonstrated but much of it undemonstrated (for example, Hokan–Siouan, which, incidentally, Edward Sapir called his "wastepaper basket stock").[83] Still other proposals are almost unanimously rejected by specialists (for example, Amerind). Below is a (partial) list of some such proposals:

Good discussions of past proposals can be found in Campbell (1997) and Campbell & Mithun (1979).

Amerindian linguist Lyle Campbell also assigned different percentage values of probability and confidence for various proposals of macro-families and language relationships, depending on his views of the proposals' strengths.[84] For example, the Germanic language family would receive probability and confidence percentage values of +100% and 100%, respectively. However, if Turkish and Quechua were compared, the probability value might be −95%, while the confidence value might be 95%.[clarification needed] 0% probability or confidence would mean complete uncertainty.

Language Family Probability Confidence
Algonkian–Gulf −50% 50%
Almosan (and beyond) −75% 50%
Atakapa–Chitimacha −50% 60%
Aztec–Tanoan 0% 50%
Coahuiltecan −85% 80%
Eskimo–Aleut,
Chukotan
[85]
−25% 20%
Guaicurian–Hokan 0% 10%
Gulf −25% 40%
Hokan–Subtiaba −90% 75%
Jicaque–Hokan −30% 25%
Jicaque–Subtiaba −60% 80%
Jicaque–Tequistlatecan +65% 50%
Keresan and Uto-Aztecan 0% 60%
Keresan and Zuni −40% 40%
Macro-Mayan[86] +30% 25%
Macro-Siouan[87] −20% 75%
Maya–Chipaya −80% 95%
Maya–Chipaya–Yunga −90% 95%
Mexican Penutian −40% 60%
Misumalpan–Chibchan +20% 50%
Mosan −60% 65%
Na-Dene 0% 25%
Natchez–Muskogean +40% 20%
Nostratic–Amerind −90% 75%
Otomanguean–Huave +25% 25%
Purépecha–Quechua −90% 80%
Quechua as Hokan −85% 80%
Quechumaran +50% 50%
Sahaptian–Klamath–(Molala) +75% 50%
Sahaptian–Klamath–Tsimshian +10% 10%
Takelman[88] +80% 60%
Tlapanec–Subtiaba as Otomanguean +95% 90%
Tlingit–Eyak–Athabaskan +75% 40%
Tunican 0% 20%
Wakashan and Chimakuan 0% 25%
Yukian–Gulf −85% 70%
Yukian–Siouan −60% 75%
Zuni–Penutian −80% 50%

Pronouns

It has long been observed that a remarkable number of Native American languages have a pronominal pattern with first-person singular forms in n and second-person singular forms in m. (Compare first-person singular m and second-person singular t across much of northern Eurasia, as in English me and thee, Spanish me and te, and Hungarian -m and -d.) This pattern was first noted by Alfredo Trombetti in 1905. It caused Sapir to suggest that ultimately all Native American languages would turn out to be related. In a personal letter to A. L. Kroeber he wrote (Sapir 1918):[89]

Getting down to brass tacks, how in the Hell are you going to explain general American n- 'I' except genetically? It's disturbing, I know, but (more) non-committal conservatism is only dodging, after all, isn't it? Great simplifications are in store for us.

The supposed "n/m – I/you" pattern has attracted attention even from those linguists who are normally critical of such long-distance proposals. Johanna Nichols investigated the distribution of the languages that have an n/m pattern and found that they are mostly confined to the western coast of the Americas, and that similarly they exist in East Asia and northern New Guinea. She suggested that they had spread through diffusion.[90] This notion was rejected by Lyle Campbell, who argued that the frequency of the n/m pattern was not statistically elevated in either area compared to the rest of the world. Campbell also showed that several of the languages that have the contrast today did not have it historically and stated that the pattern was largely consistent with chance resemblance, especially when taking into consideration the statistic prevalence of nasal consonants in all the pronominal systems of the world.[91] Zamponi found that Nichols's findings were distorted by her small sample size, and that some n–m languages were recent developments (though also that some languages had lost an ancestral n–m pattern), but he did find a statistical excess of the n–m pattern in western North America only. Looking at families rather than individual languages, he found a rate of 30% of families/protolanguages in North America, all on the western flank, compared to 5% in South America and 7% of non-American languages – though the percentage in North America, and especially the even higher number in the Pacific Northwest, drops considerably if Hokan and Penutian, or parts of them, are accepted as language families. If all the proposed Penutian and Hokan languages in the table below are related, then the frequency drops to 9% of North American families, statistically indistinguishable from the world average.[92]

Below is a list of families with both 1sg n and 2sg m, though in some cases the evidence for one of the forms is weak.[92]

Proto-languages with 1sg n and 2sg m[92]
Family 1sg 2sg
Penutian families
Proto-Tsimshianic *nə *mə [but also *-n]
Proto-Chinookan *nai..., *n- *mai..., *m-
Plateau
Penutian
Klamath ni 'I', ni-s 'my' mi-s 'you' (object), mi 'your'
Molala in- 'my', n- 'me' im- 'your', m- 'you' (object)
Proto-Sahaptian *(ʔî·-)n 'I' *(ʔî·-)m 'you'
Takelma àn ~ -n, -àʔn ~ -ʔn ma ~ maː
Cayuse íniŋ, nǐs- mǐs-
Proto-Maiduan *ni 'I', *nik 'me', *nik-k’i 'my' *mi 'you', *min 'you' (obj), *min-k’i 'your'
Proto-Wintuan *ni 'I', *ni-s 'me', *ne-r 'my', *ne-t 'my' *mi 'you', *mi-s (obj.), *mar 'your', *ma-t 'your'
Yok-
utian
Proto-Yokutsan *naʔ 'I', *nan 'me', *nam ~ *nim 'my' *maʔ 'you', *man 'you' (obj), *mam ~ *min 'your'
Proto-Utian *ka·ni 'I', *ka(·)na 'my'[93] *mi·(n)
Proto-Huavean *nV *mɪ
Proto-Mixe-Zoquean *n-heʔ 'mine', *n- *mici, *min-
Hokan families
Chimariko noʔot mamot, m-, -m
Karok ná· 'I', nani- ~ nini- 'my' ʔí·m 'you', mi- 'your'
Coahuilteco n(ami), n- ~ na-, nak-, niw- mak-, may- ~ mi-
Proto-Yuman *ʔnʸaː 'I', *nʸ- *maː 'you', *m-
? Proto-Lencan [*u(nani)], *-on ~ u(na) *ama(nani), am-/ma-, -mi/-ma
Other North America
Karankawa na-, n- m-
Proto-Kiowa-Tanoan *ną *wįm
Proto-Uto-Aztecan *(i)nɨ 'I', *(i)nɨ- 'my' *ɨ(mɨ) 'you', *ɨ(mɨ) 'your'
Proto-Chibchan nasal *dã or *na nasal *bã or *ma
South America
Proto-Guahiboan *(xá-)ni, *-nV *(xá-)mi
Proto-Aymaran *na-ya 'I', *-Na 'my' *hu-ma 'you', *-ma 'you(r)'
Mapuche [iɲtʃé 'I'], -(ɨ)n 'I', nyi 'my' (also 'his/her') eymi 'you', mi 'your', -m
? Puelche nɨ-, -ɨn ~ -an[94] (kɨ-)ma-w, mu- ~ mɨ-
? Proto-Uru-Chipaya (Chipaya only) -n am
? Proto-Timotean Timote-Cuica an,
Mucuchí-Maripú unknown
Mucuchí-Maripú ma,
Timote-Cuica ih

Other scattered families may have one or the other but not both.

Besides Proto-Eskaleut and Proto-Na–Dene, the families in North America with neither 1sg n or 2sg m are Atakapan, Chitimacha, Cuitlatec, Haida, Kutenai, Proto-Caddoan, Proto-Chimakuan, Proto-Comecrudan, Proto-Iroquoian, Proto-Muskogean, Proto-Siouan-Catawba, Tonkawa, Waikuri, Yana, Yuchi, Zuni.

There are also a number of neighboring families in South America that have a tʃ–k pattern (the Duho proposal, plus possibly Arutani–Sape), or an i–a pattern (the Macro-Jê proposal, including Fulnio and Chiquitano, plus Matacoan,[95] Zamucoan and Payaguá).[92]

Linguistic areas

Unattested languages

Several languages are only known by mention in historical documents or from only a few names or words. It cannot be determined that these languages actually existed or that the few recorded words are actually of known or unknown languages. Some may simply be from a historian's errors. Others are of known people with no linguistic record (sometimes due to lost records). A short list is below.

Loukotka (1968) reports the names of hundreds of South American languages which do not have any linguistic documentation.

Pidgins and mixed languages

Various miscellaneous languages such as pidgins, mixed languages, trade languages, and sign languages are given below in alphabetical order.

  1. American Indian Pidgin English
  2. Algonquian-Basque pidgin (also known as Micmac-Basque Pidgin, Souriquois; spoken by the Basques, Micmacs, and Montagnais in eastern Canada)
  3. Broken Oghibbeway (also known as Broken Ojibwa)
  4. Broken Slavey
  5. Bungee (also known as Bungi, Bungie, Bungay, or the Red River Dialect)
  6. Callahuaya (also known as Machaj-Juyai, Kallawaya, Collahuaya, Pohena, Kolyawaya Jargon)
  7. Carib Pidgin (also known as Ndjuka-Amerindian Pidgin, Ndjuka-Trio)
  8. Carib Pidgin–Arawak Mixed Language
  9. Catalangu
  10. Chinook Jargon
  11. Delaware Jargon (also known as Pidgin Delaware)
  12. Eskimo Trade Jargon (also known as Herschel Island Eskimo Pidgin, Ship's Jargon)
  13. Greenlandic Pidgin (West Greenlandic Pidgin)
  14. Guajiro-Spanish
  15. Güegüence-Nicarao
  16. Haida Jargon
  17. Inuktitut-English Pidgin (Quebec)
  18. Jargonized Powhatan
  19. Keresan Sign Language
  20. Labrador Eskimo Pidgin (also known as Labrador Inuit Pidgin)
  21. Lingua Franca Apalachee
  22. Lingua Franca Creek
  23. Lingua Geral Amazônica (also known as Nheengatú, Lingua Boa, Lingua Brasílica, Lingua Geral do Norte)
  24. Lingua Geral do Sul (also known as Lingua Geral Paulista, Tupí Austral)
  25. Loucheux Jargon (also known as Jargon Loucheux)
  26. Media Lengua
  27. Mednyj Aleut (also known as Copper Island Aleut, Medniy Aleut, CIA)
  28. Michif (also known as French Cree, Métis, Metchif, Mitchif, Métchif)
  29. Mobilian Jargon (also known as Mobilian Trade Jargon, Chickasaw-Chocaw Trade Language, Yamá)
  30. Montagnais Pidgin Basque (also known as Pidgin Basque-Montagnais)
  31. Nootka Jargon (spoken during the 18th-19th centuries; later replaced by Chinook Jargon)
  32. Ocaneechi (also known as Occaneechee; spoken in Virginia and the Carolinas in early colonial times)
  33. Pidgin Massachusett
  34. Plains Indian Sign Language

Writing systems

While most Indigenous languages have adopted the Latin script as the written form of their languages, a few languages have their own unique writing systems after encountering the Latin script (often through missionaries) that are still in use. All pre-Columbian Indigenous writing systems are no longer used.

Indigenous Writing Systems of the Americas
Writing System Type Language(s) Region(s) Date in usage Status Inventor
Quipu N/A (string) Aymara, Quechua, Puquina Andean civilizations (Western South America) 3rd millennium BCE – 17th century Extinct
Olmec hieroglyphs Logogram Mixe–Zoque languages Isthmus of Tehuantepec 1500 BCE – 400 BCE Extinct
Zapotec writing unknown Zapotec languages Oaxaca 500 BCE – 700 CE Extinct
Epi-Olmec/Isthmian script Logogram Zoque languages Isthmus of Tehuantepec 500 BCE – 500 CE Extinct
Abaj Takalik and Kaminaljuyú scripts unknown unknown Mixe–Zoquean language Southern Guatemala Extinct
Maya script Logogram Mayan languages Maya civilization: Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico, Guatemala, & Belize 3rd century BCE – 16th century CE Extinct
Mixtec script Semasiogram[96] Mixtecan languages Oaxaca, Puebla, Guerrero 13th century – 16th century CE Extinct
Aztec script Semasiogram Nahuatl Central Mexico 14th century – 16th century CE Extinct
Komqwejwi'kasikl (Miꞌkmaw Hieroglyphs) Logogram Mi'kmaq Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, & New Brunswick 17th–19th century Extinct
Cherokee syllabary Syllabary Cherokee Cherokee Nation, United States 1820s–present Active Sequoyah ᏍᏏᏉᏯ
Canadian Aboriginal syllabics Abugida Algonquian languages (Cree, Naskapi, Ojibwe/Chippewa, & Blackfoot (Siksika))

Eskimo–Aleut languages (Inuktitut & Inuinnaqtun)

Athabaskan languages (Dane-zaa, Slavey, Chipewyan (Denesuline)/Sayisi, Carrier (Dakelh), & Sekani)

Canada 1840s–present Active James Evans ᒉᐃᒻᔅ ᐁᕙᓐᔅ
Yugtun script Syllabary Central Alaskan Yup'ik Alaska 1900–present Endangered Uyaquq
Afaka syllabary Syllabary Ndyuka Suriname, French Guiana 1910–present Endangered Afáka Atumisi
Osage script Alphabet Osage Osage Nation, United States 2006–present Active Herman Mongrain Lookout

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Greenberg, Joseph (1987). Language in the Americas. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-1315-3.
  2. ^ Campbell, Lyle (2000). American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-534983-2., page 253
  3. ^ Gordon, Raymond G., Jr. (Ed.). (2005). Ethnologue: Languages of the World (15th ed.). Dallas, Texas: SIL International. ISBN 1-55671-159-X. (Online version: http://www.ethnologue.com)
  4. ^ Schwartz, Saul (2018). "The predicament of language and culture: Advocacy, anthropology, and dormant language communities". Journal of Linguistic Anthropology. 28 (3): 332–355. doi:10.1111/jola.12204. S2CID 150209288.
  5. ^ "Census Shows Native Languages Count". Language Magazine. Retrieved 2020-08-16.
  6. ^ "Population by Aboriginal mother tongue, Aboriginal language spoken most often at home and Aboriginal language spoken on a regular basis at home, for Canada, provinces and territories". Retrieved May 18, 2020.
  7. ^ Premm, Hanns J.; Riese, Berthold (1983). Coulmas, Florian; Ehlich, Konrad (eds.). Autochthonous American writing systems: The Aztec and Mayan examples. Writing in Focus. Trends in Linguistics: Studies and Monographs. Vol. 24. Berlin: Mouton Publishers. pp. 167–169. ISBN 978-90-279-3359-1. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
  8. ^ Wichmann, Soren (2006). "Mayan Historical Linguistics and Epigraphy: A New Synthesis". Annual Review of Anthropology. 35: 279–294. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.35.081705.123257.
  9. ^ Shapiro, Judith (1987). "From Tupã to the Land without Evil: The Christianization of Tupi-Guarani Cosmology". American Ethnologist. 1 (14): 126–139. doi:10.1525/ae.1987.14.1.02a00080.
  10. ^ "Lov om Grønlands Selvstyre Kapitel 7 Sprog" [Law of Greenland Self-Determination Chapter 7 Language] (PDF). www.stm.dk. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  11. ^ Campbell, Lyle (1997). American Indian languages: the historical linguistics of Native America. Ch. 3 The Origin of American Indian Languages, pp. 90–106. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509427-1.
  12. ^ Blench, Roger. (2008) Accounting for the Diversity of Amerindian Languages: Modelling the Settlement of the New World. Paper presented at the Archaeology Research Seminar, RSPAS, Canberra, Australia.
  13. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  14. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  15. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  16. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  17. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  18. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  19. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  20. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  21. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  22. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  23. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  24. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  25. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  26. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  27. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  28. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  29. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  30. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  31. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  32. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  33. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  34. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  35. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  36. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  37. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  38. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  39. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  40. ^ "Language Highlight Tables, 2016 Census - Aboriginal mother tongue, Aboriginal language spoken most often at home and Other Aboriginal language(s) spoken regularly at home for the population excluding institutional residents of Canada, provinces and territories, 2016 Census – 100% Data". Canada Statistics. 2017-08-02. Retrieved 2017-11-22.
  41. ^ "Greenland's statistics". www.stat.gl/. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  42. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  43. ^ Ethnologue (2021)
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h "Brasil tem cinco línguas indígenas com mais de 10 mil falantes". Agência Brasil (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2014-12-11. Retrieved 2020-08-30.
  45. ^ "Census in Brief: The Aboriginal languages of First Nations people, Métis and Inuit". Statistics Canada. 25 October 2017. Retrieved 2017-11-12.
  46. ^ Shuar at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  47. ^ a b c d "The Blackfoot Language Resources and Digital Dictionary project: Creating integrated web resources for language documentation and revitalization" (PDF). p. 277. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  48. ^ Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  49. ^ Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  50. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  51. ^ "Language Highlight Tables, 2016 Census - Aboriginal mother tongue, Aboriginal language spoken most often at home and Other Aboriginal language(s) spoken regularly at home for the population excluding institutional residents of Canada, provinces and territories, 2016 Census – 100% Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Government of Canada, Statistics. 2 August 2017. Retrieved 2017-11-22.
  52. ^ Ethnologue (21st ed., 2018)
  53. ^ Ethnologue (19th ed., 2016)
  54. ^ Hofling, Mopan Maya–Spanish–English Dictionary, 1.
  55. ^ Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  56. ^ "PROTO-MACRO-JÊ: UM ESTUDO RECONSTRUTIVO" (PDF).
  57. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "IBGE - Indigenous languages census" (PDF).
  58. ^ Ethnologue (21st ed., 2018)
  59. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  60. ^ "Mohawk". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  61. ^ Canada, Government of Canada, Statistics (28 March 2018). "Aboriginal Mother Tongue (90), Single and Multiple Mother Tongue Responses (3), Aboriginal Identity (9), Registered or Treaty Indian Status (3) and Age (12) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces and Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2016 Census - 25% Sample Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  62. ^ "Idiomas indígenas Macuxi e Wapixana são oficializados em município de Roraima – Amazônia.org" (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2020-10-26.
  63. ^ Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  64. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  65. ^ Canada, Government of Canada, Statistics (28 March 2018). "Aboriginal Mother Tongue (90), Single and Multiple Mother Tongue Responses (3), Aboriginal Identity (9), Registered or Treaty Indian Status (3) and Age (12) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces and Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2016 Census - 25% Sample Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  66. ^ "UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger". www.unesco.org. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  67. ^ "UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger". www.unesco.org. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  68. ^ Cocopah at Ethnologue (19th ed., 2016)
  69. ^ Havasupai‑Walapai‑Yavapai at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  70. ^ INALI (2012) México: Lenguas indígenas nacionales
  71. ^ "Kumiai". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2018-04-14.
  72. ^ Ethnologue (21st ed., 2018)
  73. ^ Quechan at Ethnologue (19th ed., 2016)
  74. ^ Yavapai at Ethnologue (19th ed., 2016)
  75. ^ Mojave language at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  76. ^ INALI (2012) México: Lenguas indígenas nacionales
  77. ^ "Language Highlight Tables, 2016 Census - Aboriginal mother tongue, Aboriginal language spoken most often at home and Other Aboriginal language(s) spoken regularly at home for the population excluding institutional residents of Canada, provinces and territories, 2016 Census – 100% Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Government of Canada. 2 August 2017. Retrieved 2017-11-23.
  78. ^ Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  79. ^ "Estadística básica de la población hablante de lenguas indígenas nacionales 2015" (PDF). site.inali.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-06-11.
  80. ^ "UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger". www.unesco.org. Retrieved 2018-05-20.
  81. ^ If the Caucasus is considered to be a part of Europe, Northwest Caucasian and Northeast Caucasian would be included resulting in five language families within Europe. Other language families, such as the Turkic, Mongolic, Afroasiatic families have entered Europe in later migrations.
  82. ^ Nater 1984, pg. 5
  83. ^ Ruhlen, Merritt. (1991 [1987]). A Guide to the World's Languages Volume 1: Classification, p.216. Edward Arnold. Paperback: ISBN 0-340-56186-6.
  84. ^ Campbell, Lyle (1997). American Indian languages: the historical linguistics of Native America. Ch. 8 Distant Genetic Relationships, pp. 260–329. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509427-1.
  85. ^ American-Arctic–Paleosiberian Phylum, Luoravetlan – and beyond
  86. ^ Macro-Mayan includes Mayan, Totonacan, Mixe–Zoquean, and sometimes Huave.
  87. ^ Siouan–Iroquoian–Caddoan–[Yuchi]
  88. ^ Alternatively Takelma–Kalapuyan
  89. ^ See Sapir 1918
  90. ^ Nichols & Peterson 1996
  91. ^ Campbell 1997
  92. ^ a b c d Raoul Zamponi (2017) 'First-person n and second-person m in Native America: a fresh look'. Italian Journal of Linguistics, 29.2
  93. ^ possibly from *-ni and *-na
  94. ^ Proto-Chonan proper, sans Puelche, has only 2sg *maː
  95. ^ Guaicuruan has 1sg i only
  96. ^ "Writing Systems of Mesoamerica" (PDF). El Camino College’s Student Equity and Achievement Program. El Camino College. Retrieved 30 June 2022.

Bibliography

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  • Goddard, Ives. (2005). The indigenous languages of the southeast. Anthropological Linguistics, 47 (1), 1–60.
  • Mithun, Marianne. (1990). Studies of North American Indian Languages. Annual Review of Anthropology, 19(1): 309–330.
  • Mithun, Marianne. (1999). The languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23228-7 (hbk); ISBN 0-521-29875-X.
  • Nater, Hank F. (1984). The Bella Coola Language. Mercury Series; Canadian Ethnology Service (No. 92). Ottawa: National Museums of Canada.
  • Powell, John W. (1891). Indian linguistic families of America north of Mexico. Seventh annual report, Bureau of American Ethnology (pp. 1–142). Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. (Reprinted in P. Holder (Ed.), 1966, Introduction to Handbook of American Indian languages by Franz Boas and Indian linguistic families of America, north of Mexico, by J. W. Powell, Lincoln: University of Nebraska).
  • Powell, John W. (1915). Linguistic families of American Indians north of Mexico by J. W. Powell, revised by members of the staff of the Bureau of American Ethnology. (Map). Bureau of American Ethnology miscellaneous publication (No. 11). Baltimore: Hoen.
  • Sebeok, Thomas A. (Ed.). (1973). Linguistics in North America (parts 1 & 2). Current trends in linguistics (Vol. 10). The Hauge: Mouton. (Reprinted as Sebeok 1976).
  • Sebeok, Thomas A. (Ed.). (1976). Native languages of the Americas. New York: Plenum.
  • Sherzer, Joel. (1973). Areal linguistics in North America. In T. A. Sebeok (Ed.), Linguistics in North America (part 2, pp. 749–795). Current trends in linguistics (Vol. 10). The Hauge: Mouton. (Reprinted in Sebeok 1976).
  • Sherzer, Joel. (1976). An areal-typological study of American Indian languages north of Mexico. Amsterdam: North-Holland.
  • Sletcher, Michael, 'North American Indians', in Will Kaufman and Heidi Macpherson, eds., Britain and the Americas: Culture, Politics, and History, (2 vols., Oxford, 2005).
  • Sturtevant, William C. (Ed.). (1978–present). Handbook of North American Indians (Vol. 1–20). Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution. (Vols. 1–3, 16, 18–20 not yet published).
  • Vaas, Rüdiger: 'Die Sprachen der Ureinwohner'. In: Stoll, Günter, Vaas, Rüdiger: Spurensuche im Indianerland. Hirzel. Stuttgart 2001, chapter 7.
  • Voegelin, Carl F.; & Voegelin, Florence M. (1965). Classification of American Indian languages. Languages of the world, Native American fasc. 2, sec. 1.6). Anthropological Linguistics, 7 (7): 121–150.
  • Zepeda, Ofelia; Hill, Jane H. (1991). The condition of Native American Languages in the United States. In R. H. Robins & E. M. Uhlenbeck (Eds.), Endangered languages (pp. 135–155). Oxford: Berg.

South America

  • Adelaar, Willem F. H.; & Muysken, Pieter C. (2004). The languages of the Andes. Cambridge language surveys. Cambridge University Press.
  • Fabre, Alain. (1998). "Manual de las lenguas indígenas sudamericanas, I-II". München: Lincom Europa.
  • Kaufman, Terrence. (1990). Language history in South America: What we know and how to know more. In D. L. Payne (Ed.), Amazonian linguistics: Studies in lowland South American languages (pp. 13–67). Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-70414-3.
  • Kaufman, Terrence. (1994). The native languages of South America. In C. Mosley & R. E. Asher (Eds.), Atlas of the world's languages (pp. 46–76). London: Routledge.
  • Key, Mary R. (1979). The grouping of South American languages. Tübingen: Gunter Narr Verlag.
  • Loukotka, Čestmír. (1968). Classification of South American Indian languages. Los Angeles: Latin American Studies Center, University of California.
  • Mason, J. Alden. (1950). The languages of South America. In J. Steward (Ed.), Handbook of South American Indians (Vol. 6, pp. 157–317). Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology bulletin (No. 143). Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
  • Migliazza, Ernest C.; & Campbell, Lyle. (1988). Panorama general de las lenguas indígenas en América. Historia general de América (Vol. 10). Caracas: Instituto Panamericano de Geografía e Historia.
  • Rodrigues, Aryon. (1986). Linguas brasileiras: Para o conhecimento das linguas indígenas. São Paulo: Edições Loyola.
  • Rowe, John H. (1954). Linguistics classification problems in South America. In M. B. Emeneau (Ed.), Papers from the symposium on American Indian linguistics (pp. 10–26). University of California publications in linguistics (Vol. 10). Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Sapir, Edward. (1929). Central and North American languages. In The encyclopædia britannica: A new survey of universal knowledge (14 ed.) (Vol. 5, pp. 138–141). London: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company, Ltd.
  • Voegelin, Carl F.; & Voegelin, Florence M. (1977). Classification and index of the world's languages. Amsterdam: Elsevier. ISBN 0-444-00155-7.
  • Debian North American Indigenous Languages Project

External links

  • Catálogo de línguas indígenas sul-americanas
  • Diccionario etnolingüístico y guía bibliográfica de los pueblos indígenas sudamericanos
  • Towards a general typology of South American indigenous languages. A bibliographical database
  • The Archive of the Indigenous Languages of Latin America
  • Indigenous Language Institute
  • The Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas (SSILA)
  • Southern Oregon Digital Archives First Nations Tribal Collection (collection of ethnographic, linguistic, & historical material)
  • Project for the Documentation of the Languages of Mesoamerica
  • Programa de Formación en Educación Intercultural Bilingüe para los Países Andinos
  • (University of California at Davis)
  • Native Languages of the Americas
  • International Journal of American Linguistics
  • (Saskatchewan Indian Cultural Centre)
  • Alaska Native Language Center

indigenous, languages, americas, amerindian, language, redirects, here, proposed, language, family, amerind, languages, this, article, external, links, follow, wikipedia, policies, guidelines, please, improve, this, article, removing, excessive, inappropriate,. Amerindian language redirects here For the proposed language family see Amerind languages This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Over a thousand indigenous languages are spoken by the Indigenous peoples of the Americas These languages cannot all be demonstrated to be related to each other and are classified into a hundred or so language families including a large number of language isolates as well as a number of extinct languages that are unclassified because of a lack of data Yucatec Maya writing in the Dresden Codex ca 11 12th century Chichen Itza Many proposals have been made to relate some or all of these languages to each other with varying degrees of success The best known is Joseph Greenberg s Amerind hypothesis 1 which nearly all specialists reject because of methodological flaws spurious data and a failure to distinguish cognation contact and coincidence 2 Nonetheless there are indications that some of the recognized families are related to each other such as widespread similarities in pronouns e g n m is a common pattern for I you across western North America and ch k t for I you we is similarly found in a more limited region of South America According to UNESCO most of the Indigenous languages of the Americas are critically endangered and many are dormant without native speakers but with a community of heritage language users or entirely extinct 3 4 The most widely spoken Indigenous languages are Southern Quechua spoken primarily in southern Peru and Bolivia and Guarani centered in Paraguay where it is the national language with perhaps six or seven million speakers apiece including many of European descent in the case of Guarani Only half a dozen others have more than a million speakers these are Aymara of Bolivia and Nahuatl of Mexico with almost two million each the Mayan languages Kekchi Quiche and Yucatec of Guatemala and Mexico with about 1 million apiece and perhaps one or two additional Quechuan languages in Peru and Ecuador In the United States 372 000 people reported speaking an Indigenous language at home in the 2010 census 5 and similarly in Canada 133 000 people reported speaking an Indigenous language at home in the 2011 census 6 In Greenland about 90 of the population speaks Greenlandic the most widely spoken Eskimo Aleut language Contents 1 Background 2 Origins 3 Numbers of speakers and political recognition 4 Language families and unclassified languages 4 1 Northern America 4 2 Central America and Mexico 4 3 South America and the Caribbean 5 Language stock proposals 6 Pronouns 7 Linguistic areas 8 Unattested languages 9 Pidgins and mixed languages 10 Writing systems 11 See also 12 Notes 13 Bibliography 13 1 North America 13 2 South America 14 External linksBackground EditFurther information Indigenous peoples of the Americas Over a thousand known languages were spoken by various peoples in North and South America prior to their first contact with Europeans These encounters occurred between the beginning of the 11th century with the Nordic settlement of Greenland and failed efforts in Newfoundland and Labrador and the end of the 15th century the voyages of Christopher Columbus Several Indigenous cultures of the Americas had also developed their own writing systems 7 the best known being the Maya script 8 The Indigenous languages of the Americas had widely varying demographics from the Quechuan languages Aymara Guarani and Nahuatl which had millions of active speakers to many languages with only several hundred speakers After pre Columbian times several Indigenous creole languages developed in the Americas based on European Indigenous and African languages The European colonizers and their successor states had widely varying attitudes towards Native American languages In Brazil friars learned and promoted the Tupi language 9 In many Spanish colonies Spanish missionaries often learned local languages and culture in order to preach to the natives in their own tongue and relate the Christian message to their Indigenous religions In the British American colonies John Eliot of the Massachusetts Bay Colony translated the Bible into the Massachusett language also called Wampanoag or Natick 1661 1663 he published the first Bible printed in North America the Eliot Indian Bible The Europeans also suppressed use of Indigenous languages establishing their own languages for official communications destroying texts in other languages and insisting that Indigenous people learn European languages in schools As a result Indigenous languages suffered from cultural suppression and loss of speakers By the 18th and 19th centuries Spanish English Portuguese French and Dutch brought to the Americas by European settlers and administrators had become the official or national languages of modern nation states of the Americas Many Indigenous languages have become critically endangered but others are vigorous and part of daily life for millions of people Several Indigenous languages have been given official status in the countries where they occur such as Guarani in Paraguay In other cases official status is limited to certain regions where the languages are most spoken Although sometimes enshrined in constitutions as official the languages may be used infrequently in de facto official use Examples are Quechua in Peru and Aymara in Bolivia where in practice Spanish is dominant in all formal contexts In the North American Arctic region Greenland in 2009 adopted Kalaallisut 10 as its sole official language In the United States the Navajo language is the most spoken Native American language with more than 200 000 speakers in the Southwestern United States The US Marine Corps recruited Navajo men who were established as code talkers during World War II Origins EditSee also Settlement of the Americas In American Indian Languages The Historical Linguistics of Native America 1997 Lyle Campbell lists several hypotheses for the historical origins of Amerindian languages 11 A single one language migration not widely accepted A few linguistically distinct migrations favored by Edward Sapir Multiple migrations Multilingual migrations single migration with multiple languages The influx of already diversified but related languages from the Old World Extinction of Old World linguistic relatives while the New World ones survived Migration along the Pacific coast instead of by the Bering StraitRoger Blench 2008 has advocated the theory of multiple migrations along the Pacific coast of peoples from northeastern Asia who already spoke diverse languages These proliferated in the New World 12 Numbers of speakers and political recognition EditCountries like Mexico Bolivia Venezuela Guatemala and Guyana recognize all or most Indigenous languages native to their respective countries with Bolivia and Venezuela elevating all Indigenous languages to official language status according to their constitutions Colombia delegates local Indigenous language recognition to the department level according to the Colombian Constitution of 1991 Countries like Canada Argentina and the United States allow their respective provinces and states to determine their own language recognition policies Indigenous language recognition in Brazil is limited to their localities Bullet points represent minority language status Political entities with official language status are highlighted in bold List of Widely Spoken and Officially Recognized Languages Language Number of speakers Official Recognition Area s Language is spoken SourceGuarani 6 500 000 Paraguay Official Language BoliviaCorrientes ArgentinaTacuru Mato Grosso do Sul BrazilMercosur Paraguay Bolivia Argentina Brazil 13 Southern Quechua 5 000 000 outdated figure Bolivia Official Language Peru Official Language Jujuy Argentina ChileComunidad Andina Bolivia Peru Argentina Chile 14 Nahuatl 1 700 000 Mexico Mexico 15 Aymara 1 700 000 Bolivia Official Language Peru Official Language ChileComunidad Andina Bolivia Peru Chile 16 Qʼeqchiʼ 1 100 000 Guatemala BelizeMexico Guatemala Belize Mexico 17 Kʼicheʼ 1 100 000 Guatemala Mexico Guatemala amp Mexico 18 Yucatec Maya 890 000 Mexico Belize Mexico amp Belize 19 Ancash Quechua 700 000 outdated figure Peru 20 Mam 600 000 Guatemala MexicoZapatista Autonomous Municipalities De facto Mexico Guatemala amp MexicoTzeltal 560 000 Mexico Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities De facto Mexico Mexico 21 Mixtec 520 000 Mexico Mexico 22 Tzotzil 490 000 Mexico Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities De facto Mexico Mexico 23 Zapotec 480 000 Mexico Mexico 24 Kichwa 450 000 Ecuador Colombia Cauca Narino Putumayo Ecuador amp Colombia Cauca Narino Putumayo 25 Wayuu Guajiro 420 000 Venezuela La Guajira Colombia Venezuela amp ColombiaKaqchikel 410 000 Guatemala Mexico Guatemala amp Mexico 26 Otomi 310 000 Mexico Mexico 27 Totonac 270 000 Mexico Mexico 28 Mapuche 260 000 Cautin Province La Araucania Chile Galvarino Padre Las Casas Cautin Province La Araucania Chile Galvarino Padre Las Casas 29 Ch ol 250 000 Mexico Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities De facto Mexico Mexico 30 Mazateco 240 000 Mexico Mexico 31 Qʼanjobʼal 170 000 Guatemala Mexico Guatemala amp MexicoHuasteco 170 000 Mexico Mexico 32 Navajo 170 000 Navajo Nation United States Southwestern US 33 Mazahua 150 000 Mexico Mexico 34 Miskito 140 000 outdated figure North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region Nicaragua Honduras Gracias a Dios Nicaragua HondurasChinanteco 140 000 Mexico Mexico 35 Mixe 130 000 Mexico Mexico 36 Tlapaneco 130 000 Mexico Mexico 37 Poqomchiʼ 130 000 Guatemala GuatemalaPurepecha Tarasco 120 000 Mexico Mexico 38 Achi 120 000 Guatemala GuatemalaIxil 120 000 Guatemala Mexico Guatemala amp MexicoYaru Quechua 100 000 circa outdated figure Peru 39 Cree 96 000 incl Naskapi Montagnais Northwest Territories Canada Alberta Manitoba Ontario Quebec Saskatchewan Canada 40 Tarahumara 74 000 Mexico MexicoTz utujil 72 000 Guatemala GuatemalaKuna 61 000 Colombia Choco amp Antioquia Colombia Choco amp Antioquia Paez 60 000 Colombia Cauca Huila Valle del Cauca Colombia Cauca Huila Valle del Cauca Chuj 59 000 Guatemala Mexico Guatemala amp MexicoKalaallisut 57 000 Greenland Greenland 41 Amuzgo 55 588 Mexico MexicoTojolabʼal 51 733 Mexico Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities De facto Mexico MexicoGarifuna 50 000 circa outdated figure Guatemala BelizeNorth Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region NicaraguaHonduras Atlantida Colon Gracias a Dios Guatemala Belize Nicaragua Honduras 42 Ojibwe 48 000 Canada United States Canada amp United States 43 Tikuna 47 000 Colombia Leticia Puerto Narino Amazonas Amazonas regions of Brazil and Colombia 44 Chatino 45 000 Mexico MexicoHuichol 44 800 Mexico MexicoMayo 39 600 Mexico MexicoInuktitut 39 475 Nunavut Canada Northwest Territories Canada Nunavik Quebec Nunatsiavut Newfoundland and Labrador Inuvialuit Settlement Region Yukon Nunavut Northwest Territories Quebec and Labrador Canada 45 Chontal Maya 37 072 Mexico MexicoWichi 36 135 Chaco Argentina Chaco ArgentinaTepehuan 36 000 Mexico MexicoSoteapanec 35 050 Mexico MexicoShuar 35 000 Ecuador Ecuador 46 Blackfoot 34 394 Alberta Canada amp Montana US 47 Sikuani 34 000 Colombia Meta Vichada Arauca Guainia Guaviare Colombia Meta Vichada Arauca Guainia Guaviare Jakaltek 33 000 Guatemala Mexico Guatemala amp MexicoKom 31 580 Chaco Argentina Chaco ArgentinaPoqomam 30 000 Guatemala GuatemalaCh orti 30 000 Guatemala GuatemalaKaiwa 26 500 Mato Grosso do Sul Brazil 44 Sioux 25 000 South Dakota United States US 48 Oʼodham 23 313 Tohono Oʼodham Nation United States Salt River Pima Maricopa Indian Community United StatesMexico Arizona USKaigang 22 000 Brazil 44 Guambiano 21 000 Cauca Department Colombia Cauca Department ColombiaCora 20 100 Mexico MexicoYanomamo 20 000 Venezuela Brazil amp Venezuela 44 Nheengatu 19 000 Sao Gabriel da Cachoeira Amazonas Brazil Venezuela Brazil Colombia Venezuela 49 Yup ik Central Alaskan amp Siberian 18 626 Alaska United States Alaska United StatesHuave 17 900 Mexico Mexico 50 Yaqui 17 546 Mexico MexicoPiaroa 17 000 Vichada Colombia Vichada ColombiaSakapultek 15 000 Guatemala GuatemalaWestern Apache 14 012 San Carlos Apache Nation United States Fort Apache Indian Reservation United States Arizona USXavante 13 300 Mato Grosso Brazil 44 Keresan 13 073 New Mexico USCuicatec 13 000 Mexico MexicoAwa Pit 13 000 Narino Department Colombia Narino Department ColombiaCherokee 12 320 Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians North Carolina United States Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma United States US Oklahoma amp North Carolina Karu 12 000 Venezuela Guaviare Department ColombiaSao Gabriel da Cachoeira Amazonas Brazil Baniwa language Guaviare Colombia amp Amazonas Brazil Baniwa language Awakatek 11 607 Guatemala Mexico Guatemala MexicoChipewyan 11 325 Northwest Territories Canada Northwest Territories Canada 51 Pame 11 000 Mexico MexicoWounaan 10 800 Colombia Choco Cauca Valle del Cauca Colombia Choco Cauca Valle del Cauca Choctaw 10 368 Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma United States Oklahoma amp Mississippi US 52 Moxo 10 000 Bolivia BoliviaKogi 9 900 Magdalena Colombia Magdalena ColombiaZuni 9 620 New Mexico US 53 Guajajara 9 500 Maranhao Brazil 44 Sumo 9 000 North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region Nicaragua North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region NicaraguaMopan 9 000 12 000 Guatemala Belize Guatemala amp Belize 54 Tepehua 8 900 Mexico MexicoMawe 8 900 Brazil Para amp Amazonas 44 Terena 8 200 Mato Grosso do Sul Brazil 44 Sipakapense 8 000 Guatemala GuatemalaIka 8 000 Colombia Cesar amp Magdalena Colombia Cesar amp Magdalena Tukano 7 100 Sao Gabriel da Cachoeira Amazonas BrazilMitu Vaupes Colombia Amazonas Brazil amp Vaupes Colombia 47 Minica Huitoto 6 800 Amazonas Colombia Amazonas ColombiaHopi 6 780 Arizona US 55 Piapoco 6 400 Colombia Guainia Vichada Meta Colombia Guainia Vichada Meta Cubeo 6 300 Vaupes Colombia Vaupes ColombiaKayapo 6 200 Brazil Para amp Mato Grosso 47 Yukpa 6 000 Venezuela Cesar Colombia Venezuela ColombiaChiquitano 5 900 Bolivia Brazil amp BoliviaGuarayu 5 900 Bolivia BoliviaMacushi 5 800 Venezuela Guyana Brazil Venezuela Guyana 47 Chimane 5 300 Bolivia BoliviaTewa 5 123 New Mexico USTimbira 5 100 Brazil Maranhao Tocantins Para 56 Sanuma 5 100 Venezuel Brazil amp Venezuela 57 Muscogee 5 072 Muscogee Creek Nation OK United States US Oklahoma Alabama Florida 58 Chontal of Oaxaca 5 039 Mexico Mexico 59 Tektitek 5 000 Guatemala GuatemalaBari 5 000 Colombia Cesar amp Norte de Santander Colombia Cesar amp Norte de Santander Camsa 4 000 Putumayo Colombia Putumayo ColombiaKulina 3 900 Brazil Amazonas amp Peru 57 Crow 3 862 Montana USMohawk 3 875 Mohawk Nation of Akwesasne Canada Canada Ontario amp Quebec and US New York 60 61 Kashinawa 3 588 Brazil amp PeruMunduruku 3 563 Para amp Amazonas Brazil 57 Tunebo Uwa 3 550 Boyaca Colombia Boyaca ColombiaAyoreo 3 160 Bolivia BoliviaDesano 3 160 Bolivia BoliviaWapishana 3 154 Bonfim Roraima Brazil Guyana Bonfim Roraima Brazil Guyana 62 57 Yaminawa 3 129 Bolivia BoliviaMocovi 3 000 Chaco Argentina Chaco ArgentinaInupiaq 3 000 Alaska United States Northwest Territories Canada Alaska United States amp Northwest Territories CanadaPuinave 3 000 Guainia Colombia Venezuela Guainia Colombia amp VenezuelaCuiba 2 900 Colombia Casanare Vichada Arauca Colombia Casanare Vichada Arauca Tupi Monde 2 886 Rondonia Brazil 57 Yuracare 2 700 Bolivia BoliviaWanano 2 600 Vaupes Colombia Vaupes ColombiaShoshoni 2 512 USBora 2 400 Amazonas Colombia Amazonas ColombiaCofan 2 400 Colombia Narino Putumayo Colombia Narino Putumayo Kanamari 2 298 Amazonas Brazil 57 Fox Mesquakie Sauk Kickapoo 2 288 Sac and Fox Nation United States Mexico US amp MexicoWaiwai 2 217 Guyana Brazil GuyanaKaraja 2 137 Brazil 57 Huarijio 2 136 Mexico MexicoSlavey 2 120 Northwest Territories Canada Northwest Territories CanadaChichimeca 2 100 Mexico MexicoKoreguaje 2 100 Caqueta Colombia Caqueta ColombiaTiriyo 2 100 Brazil SurinameXerente 2 051 Tocantins Brazil 57 Uspanteko 2 000 Guatemala GuatemalaFulnio 1 871 Pernambuco Brazil 57 Pakaasnovos wari 1 854 Rondonia Brazil 57 Wiwa 1 850 Cesar Colombia Cesar ColombiaWeenhayek 1 810 Bolivia BoliviaMatlatzinca 1 800 Mexico MexicoTacana 1 800 Bolivia BoliviaTli chǫ Yatii 1 735 Northwest Territories Canada Northwest Territories CanadaCavinena 1 700 Bolivia BoliviaJupda 1 700 Amazonas Colombia Amazonas ColombiaZacatepec Mixtec 1 500 Mexico MexicoSeneca 1 453 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation Ontario Canada Ontario Canada 63 Movima 1 400 Bolivia BoliviaTlingit 1 360 Alaska United States Alaska United StatesInuinnaqtun 1 310 Nunavut Canada Northwest Territories Canada Alaska United States amp Northwest Territories amp Nunavut CanadaKiowa 1 274 Oklahoma USKa apor 1 241 Maranhao Brazil 57 Aleut 1 236 Alaska United States Alaska United StatesGwichʼin 1 217 Alaska United States Northwest Territories Canada Alaska United States amp Northwest Territories CanadaInuvialuktun 1 150 Nunavut Canada Northwest Territories Canada Nunavut Canada amp Northwest Territories CanadaArapaho 1 087 USMacuna 1 032 Vaupes Colombia Vaupes ColombiaGuayabero 1 000 Colombia Meta Guaviare Colombia Meta Guaviare Comanche 963 USChocho 810 Mexico MexicoMaricopa Piipaash 800 Salt River Pima Maricopa Indian Community AZ United States Arizona United StatesRama 740 North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region Nicaragua North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region NicaraguaSeri 729 Mexico Mexico 64 Ese Ejja 700 Bolivia BoliviaNukak 700 Guaviare Colombia Guaviare ColombiaPima Bajo 650 Mexico MexicoCayuvava 650 Bolivia BoliviaChacobo Pakawara 600 Bolivia BoliviaLacandon 600 Mexico MexicoOneida 574 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation Ontario Canada Oneida Nation of the Thames Ontario Canada Ontario Canada 65 66 67 Cocopah 515 Mexico Mexico 68 Siriono 500 Bolivia BoliviaSiona 500 Putumayo Colombia Putumayo ColombiaHavasupai Hualapai 445 Havasupai Indian Reservation AZ United States Arizona US 69 Kumeyaay 427 525 including Ipai and Tiipai languages Mexico Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation CA United States Ballot Recognition Baja California Mexico amp California US 70 71 Tembe 420 Maranhao Brazil 57 Yurok 414 California USAlutiiq Sugpiaq 400 Alaska United States Alaska United StatesTatuyo 400 Vaupes Colombia Vaupes ColombiaAndoque 370 Caqueta Colombia Caqueta ColombiaGuaja 365 Maranhao BrazilChimila 350 Magdalena Colombia Magdalena ColombiaKoyukon 300 Alaska United States Alaska United StatesHitnu 300 Arauca Colombia Arauca ColombiaMikasuki 290 Georgia and Florida US 72 Quechan 290 Imperial County CA United States Ballot Recognition Yuma County AZ United States Ballot Recognition California amp Arizona US 73 Cabiyari 270 Colombia Miriti Parana amp Amazonas Colombia Miriti Parana amp Amazonas Reyesano 250 Bolivia BoliviaAchagua 250 Meta Colombia Meta ColombiaKakwa 250 Vaupes Colombia Vaupes ColombiaYavapai 245 Arizona US 74 Siriano 220 Vaupes Colombia Vaupes ColombiaMojave 200 Arizona US 75 Paipai 200 Mexico Mexico 76 Toromono 200 Bolivia BoliviaIxcatec 190 Mexico MexicoOcaina 190 Amazonas Colombia Amazonas ColombiaHaida 168 Alaska United States Council of the Haida Nation Canada Alaska US and British Columbia CanadaMuinane 150 Amazonas Colombia Amazonas ColombiaDeg Xinag 127 Alaska United States Alaska USWarazu 125 Bolivia BoliviaAraona 110 Bolivia BoliviaUpper Tanana 100 Alaska United States Alaska USItene 90 Bolivia BoliviaAhtna 80 Alaska United States Alaska USTsimshian 70 Alaska United States Alaska USTanacross 65 Alaska United States Alaska USCayuga 61 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation Ontario Canada Cattaraugus Reservation New York United States Ontario Canada and New York US 77 Denaʼina 50 Alaska United States Alaska USOnondaga 50 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation ON Canada Ontario Canada 78 Baure 40 Bolivia BoliviaUpper Kuskokwim 40 Alaska United States Alaska USTanana 30 Alaska United States Alaska USAyapaneco 24 Mexico Mexico 79 Leco 20 Bolivia BoliviaXincan 16 Guatemala GuatemalaHan 12 Alaska United States Alaska USHolikachuk 12 Alaska United States Alaska USCarijona 6 Colombia Amazonas Guaviare Colombia Amazonas Guaviare Itonama 5 Bolivia BoliviaKiliwa 4 Mexico MexicoNonuya 2 Amazonas Colombia Colombia PeruTaino languages 0 Formerly all of the CaribbeanCochimi 0 Mexico Extinct but retains recognition Kallawaya 0 Bolivia Extinct but retains recognition Eyak 0 Alaska United States Extinct but retains recognition Tuscarora 0 Six Nations of the Grand River First Nation Ontario CanadaTuscarora Reservation New York United States Ontario Canada and New York US 80 Language families and unclassified languages EditFurther information Classification of indigenous languages of the Americas Notes Extinct languages or families are indicated by The number of family members is indicated in parentheses for example Arauan 9 means the Arauan family consists of nine languages For convenience the following list of language families is divided into three sections based on political boundaries of countries These sections correspond roughly with the geographic regions North Central and South America but are not equivalent This division cannot fully delineate Indigenous culture areas Northern America Edit Pre contact distribution of North American language families including northern Mexico Bilingual stop sign in English and the Cherokee syllabary transcription ᎠᎴᏫᏍᏗᎭ alehwisdiha Tahlequah Oklahoma There are approximately 296 spoken or formerly spoken Indigenous languages north of Mexico 269 of which are grouped into 29 families the remaining 27 languages are either isolates or unclassified citation needed The Na Dene Algic and Uto Aztecan families are the largest in terms of number of languages Uto Aztecan has the most speakers 1 95 million if the languages in Mexico are considered mostly due to 1 5 million speakers of Nahuatl Na Dene comes in second with approximately 200 000 speakers nearly 180 000 of these are speakers of Navajo and Algic in third with about 180 000 speakers mainly Cree and Ojibwe Na Dene and Algic have the widest geographic distributions Algic currently spans from northeastern Canada across much of the continent down to northeastern Mexico due to later migrations of the Kickapoo with two outliers in California Yurok and Wiyot Na Dene spans from Alaska and western Canada through Washington Oregon and California to the U S Southwest and northern Mexico with one outlier in the Plains Several families consist of only 2 or 3 languages Demonstrating genetic relationships has proved difficult due to the great linguistic diversity present in North America Two large super family proposals Penutian and Hokan look particularly promising However even after decades of research a large number of families remain North America is notable for its linguistic diversity especially in California This area has 18 language families comprising 74 languages compared to four families in Europe Indo European Uralic Turkic and Afroasiatic and one isolate Basque 81 Another area of considerable diversity appears to have been the Southeastern Woodlands citation needed however many of these languages became extinct from European contact and as a result they are for the most part absent from the historical record citation needed This diversity has influenced the development of linguistic theories and practice in the US Due to the diversity of languages in North America it is difficult to make generalizations for the region Most North American languages have a relatively small number of vowels i e three to five vowels Languages of the western half of North America often have relatively large consonant inventories The languages of the Pacific Northwest are notable for their complex phonotactics for example some languages have words that lack vowels entirely 82 The languages of the Plateau area have relatively rare pharyngeals and epiglottals they are otherwise restricted to Afroasiatic languages and the languages of the Caucasus Ejective consonants are also common in western North America although they are rare elsewhere except again for the Caucasus region parts of Africa and the Mayan family Head marking is found in many languages of North America as well as in Central and South America but outside of the Americas it is rare Many languages throughout North America are polysynthetic Eskimo Aleut languages are extreme examples although this is not characteristic of all North American languages contrary to what was believed by 19th century linguists Several families have unique traits such as the inverse number marking of the Tanoan languages the lexical affixes of the Wakashan Salishan and Chimakuan languages and the unusual verb structure of Na Dene The classification below is a composite of Goddard 1996 Campbell 1997 and Mithun 1999 See also List of unclassified languages of North America Adai Algic 30 Alsea 2 Atakapa Beothuk Caddoan 5 Cayuse Chimakuan 2 Chimariko Chinookan 3 Chitimacha Chumashan 6 Coahuilteco Comecrudan United States amp Mexico 3 Coosan 2 Cotoname Eskimo Aleut 7 Esselen Haida Iroquoian 11 Kalapuyan 3 Karankawa Karuk Keresan 2 Kutenai Maiduan 4 Muskogean 9 Na Dene United States Canada amp Mexico 39 Natchez Palaihnihan 2 Plateau Penutian 4 also known as Shahapwailutan Pomoan 7 Salinan Salishan 23 Shastan 4 Siouan 19 Siuslaw Solano Takelma Tanoan 7 Timucua Tonkawa Tsimshianic 2 Tunica Utian 15 also known as Miwok Costanoan Uto Aztecan 33 Wakashan 7 Wappo Washo Wintuan 4 Yana Yokutsan 3 Yuchi Yuki Yuman Cochimi 11 Zuni Central America and Mexico Edit The Indigenous languages of Mexico that have more than 100 000 speakers The Mayan languages The Chibchan languagesIn Central America the Mayan languages are among those used today Mayan languages are spoken by at least 6 million Indigenous Maya primarily in Guatemala Mexico Belize and Honduras In 1996 Guatemala formally recognized 21 Mayan languages by name and Mexico recognizes eight more The Mayan language family is one of the best documented and most studied in the Americas Modern Mayan languages descend from Proto Mayan a language thought to have been spoken at least 4 000 years ago it has been partially reconstructed using the comparative method See also Mesoamerican languages Alaguilac Guatemala Chibchan Central America amp South America 22 Coahuilteco Comecrudan Texas amp Mexico 3 Cotoname Cuitlatec Mexico Guerrero Epi Olmec Mexico language of undeciphered inscriptions Guaicurian 8 Huave Jicaquean 2 Lencan 2 Maratino northeastern Mexico Mayan 31 Misumalpan 5 Mixe Zoquean 19 Naolan Mexico Tamaulipas Oto Manguean 27 Pericu Purepecha Quinigua northeast Mexico Seri Solano Tequistlatecan 3 Totonacan 2 Uto Aztecan United States amp Mexico 33 Xincan 5 Yuman United States amp Mexico 11 South America and the Caribbean Edit Main article Indigenous languages of South America Some of the greater families of South America dark spots are language isolates or quasi isolate grey spots unclassified languages or languages with doubtful classification Note that Quechua the family with most speakers is not displayed A Urarina shaman 1988 Although both North and Central America are very diverse areas South America has a linguistic diversity rivalled by only a few other places in the world with approximately 350 languages still spoken and several hundred more spoken at first contact but now extinct The situation of language documentation and classification into genetic families is not as advanced as in North America which is relatively well studied in many areas Kaufman 1994 46 gives the following appraisal Since the mid 1950s the amount of published material on SA South America has been gradually growing but even so the number of researchers is far smaller than the growing number of linguistic communities whose speech should be documented Given the current employment opportunities it is not likely that the number of specialists in SA Indian languages will increase fast enough to document most of the surviving SA languages before they go out of use as most of them unavoidably will More work languishes in personal files than is published but this is a standard problem It is fair to say that SA and New Guinea are linguistically the poorest documented parts of the world However in the early 1960s fairly systematic efforts were launched in Papua New Guinea and that area much smaller than SA to be sure is in general much better documented than any part of Indigenous SA of comparable size As a result many relationships between languages and language families have not been determined and some of those relationships that have been proposed are on somewhat shaky ground The list of language families isolates and unclassified languages below is a rather conservative one based on Campbell 1997 Many of the proposed and often speculative groupings of families can be seen in Campbell 1997 Gordon 2005 Kaufman 1990 1994 Key 1979 Loukotka 1968 and in the Language stock proposals section below See also List of unclassified languages of South America Aguano Aikana Brazil Rondonia also known as Aikana Tubarao Andaqui also known as Andaqui Andaki Andoque Colombia Peru also known as Andoke Andoquero Arauan 9 Arawakan South America amp Caribbean 64 also known as Maipurean Arutani Aymaran 3 Baenan Brazil Bahia also known as Baenan Baena Barbacoan 8 Betoi Colombia also known as Betoy Jirara Bororoan Botocudoan 3 also known as Aimore Cahuapanan 2 also known as Jebero Kawapanan Camsa Colombia also known as Sibundoy Coche Candoshi also known as Maina Kandoshi Canichana Bolivia also known as Canesi Kanichana Carabayo Cariban 29 also known as Caribe Carib Catacaoan also known as Katakaoan Cayubaba Bolivia Chapacuran 9 also known as Chapacura Wanham Txapakuran Charruan also known as Charruan Chibchan Central America amp South America 22 Chimuan 3 Chipaya Uru also known as Uru Chipaya Chiquitano Choco 10 also known as Chocoan Chon 2 also known as Patagonian Chono Coeruna Brazil Cofan Colombia Ecuador Cueva Culle Peru also known as Culli Linga Kulyi Cunza Chile Bolivia Argentina also known as Atacama Atakama Atacameno Lipe Kunsa Esmeraldeno also known as Esmeralda Takame Fulnio Gamela Brazil Maranhao Gorgotoqui Bolivia Guaicuruan 7 also known as Guaykuruan Waikuruan Guajiboan 4 also known as Wahivoan Guamo Venezuela also known as Wamo Guato Harakmbut 2 also known as Tuyoneri Hibito Cholon Himarima Hodi Venezuela also known as Joti Hoti Waruwaru Huamoe Brazil Pernambuco Huaorani Ecuador Peru also known as Auca Huaorani Wao Auka Sabela Waorani Waodani Huarpe also known as Warpe Irantxe Brazil Mato Grosso Itonama Bolivia also known as Saramo Machoto Jabutian Je 13 also known as Ge Jean Gean Ye Jeiko Jirajaran 3 also known as Hiraharan Jirajarano Jirajarana Jivaroan 2 also known as Hivaro Kaimbe Kaliana also known as Caliana Cariana Sape Chirichano Kamakanan Kapixana Brazil Rondonia also known as Kanoe Kapishana Karaja Kariri Brazil Paraiba Pernambuco Ceara Katembri Katukinan 3 also known as Catuquinan Kawesqar Chile Kaweskar Alacaluf Qawasqar Halawalip Aksana Hekaine Kwaza Koaya Brazil Rondonia Leco Lapalapa Leko Lule Argentina also known as Tonocote Maku Maku of Auari Malibu also known as Malibu Mapudungun Chile Argentina also known as Araucanian Mapuche Huilliche Mascoyan 5 also known as Maskoian Mascoian Matacoan 4 also known as Mataguayan Matanawi Maxakalian 3 also known as Mashakalian Mocana Colombia Tubara Mosetenan also known as Moseten Movima Bolivia Munichi Peru also known as Muniche Muran 4 Mutu also known as Loco Nadahup 5 Nambiquaran 5 Natu Brazil Pernambuco Nonuya Peru Colombia Ofaye Old Catio Nutabe Colombia Omurano Peru also known as Mayna Mumurana Numurana Maina Rimachu Roamaina Umurano Oti Brazil Sao Paulo Otomakoan 2 Paez also known as Nasa Yuwe Palta Pankararu Brazil Pernambuco Pano Tacanan 33 Panzaleo Ecuador also known as Latacunga Quito Pansaleo Patagon Peru Peba Yaguan 2 also known as Yaguan Yawan Peban Pijao Pre Arawakan languages of the Greater Antilles Guanahatabey Macorix Ciguayo Cuba Hispaniola Puelche Chile also known as Guenaken Gennaken Pampa Pehuenche Ranquelche Puinave also known as Maku Puquina Bolivia Purian 2 Quechuan 46 Rikbaktsa Saliban 2 also known as Salivan Sechura Atalan Sec Tabancale Peru Tairona Colombia Tarairiu Brazil Rio Grande do Norte Taruma Taushiro Peru also known as Pinchi Pinche Tequiraca Peru also known as Tekiraka Avishiri Teushen Patagonia Argentina Ticuna Colombia Peru Brazil also known as Magta Tikuna Tucuna Tukna Tukuna Timotean 2 Tiniguan 2 also known as Tiniwan Pamiguan Trumai Brazil Xingu Mato Grosso Tucanoan 15 Tupian 70 including Guarani Tuxa Brazil Bahia Pernambuco Urarina also known as Shimacu Itukale Shimaku Vilela Wakona Warao Guyana Surinam Venezuela also known as Guarao Witotoan 6 also known as Huitotoan Bora Witotoan Xoko Brazil Alagoas Pernambuco also known as Shoko Xukuru Brazil Pernambuco Paraiba Yaghan Chile also known as Yamana Yanomaman 4 Yaruro also known as Jaruro Yuracare Bolivia Yuri Colombia Brazil also known as Carabayo Juri Yurumangui Colombia also known as Yurimangui Yurimangi Zamucoan 2 Zaparoan 5 also known as Zaparo Language stock proposals EditMain article Classification of indigenous languages of the Americas Hypothetical language family proposals of American languages are often cited as uncontroversial in popular writing However many of these proposals have not been fully demonstrated or even demonstrated at all Some proposals are viewed by specialists in a favorable light believing that genetic relationships are very likely to be established in the future for example the Penutian stock Other proposals are more controversial with many linguists believing that some genetic relationships of a proposal may be demonstrated but much of it undemonstrated for example Hokan Siouan which incidentally Edward Sapir called his wastepaper basket stock 83 Still other proposals are almost unanimously rejected by specialists for example Amerind Below is a partial list of some such proposals Algonquian Wakashan also known as Almosan Almosan Keresiouan Almosan Keresiouan Amerind all languages excepting Eskimo Aleut amp Na Dene Algonkian Gulf Algic Beothuk Gulf macro Arawakan Arutani Sape Ahuaque Kalianan Aztec Tanoan Uto Aztecan Tanoan Chibchan Paezan Chikitano Bororoan Chimu Chipaya Coahuiltecan Coahuilteco Cotoname Comecrudan Karankawa Tonkawa Cunza Kapixanan Dene Caucasian Dene Yeniseian Esmerelda Yaruroan Ge Pano Carib Guamo Chapacuran Gulf Muskogean Natchez Tunica Macro Kulyi Cholonan Hokan Karok Chimariko Shastan Palaihnihan Yana Pomoan Washo Esselen Yuman Salinan Chumashan Seri Tequistlatecan Hokan Siouan Hokan Keresiouan Subtiaba Tlappanec Coahuiltecan Yukian Tunican Natchez Muskogean Timucua Je Tupi Carib Jivaroan Cahuapanan Kalianan Kandoshi Omurano Taushiro Macro Katembri Taruma Kaweskar language area Keresiouan Macro Siouan Keresan Yuchi Lule Vilelan Macro Andean Macro Carib Macro Chibchan Macro Ge also known as Macro Je Macro Jibaro Macro Lekoan Macro Mayan Macro Otomakoan Macro Paesan Macro Panoan Macro Puinavean Macro Siouan Siouan Iroquoian Caddoan Macro Tucanoan Macro Tupi Karibe Macro Waikuruan Macro Warpean Muran Matanawi Huarpe Mataco Guaicuru Mosan Salishan Wakashan Chimakuan Moseten Chonan Mura Matanawian Sapir s Na Dene including Haida Haida Tlingit Eyak Athabaskan Nostratic Amerind Paezan Andaqui Paez Panzaleo Paezan Barbacoan Penutian many languages of California and sometimes languages in Mexico California Penutian Wintuan Maiduan Yokutsan Utian Oregon Penutian Takelma Coosan Siuslaw Alsean Mexican Penutian Mixe Zoque Huave Puinave Maku Quechumaran Saparo Yawan also known as Zaparo Yaguan Sechura Catacao also known as Sechura Tallan Takelman Takelma Kalapuyan Tequiraca Canichana Ticuna Yuri Yuri Ticunan Totozoque Totonacan Mixe Zoque Tunican Tunica Atakapa Chitimacha Yok Utian Yuki Wappo Good discussions of past proposals can be found in Campbell 1997 and Campbell amp Mithun 1979 Amerindian linguist Lyle Campbell also assigned different percentage values of probability and confidence for various proposals of macro families and language relationships depending on his views of the proposals strengths 84 For example the Germanic language family would receive probability and confidence percentage values of 100 and 100 respectively However if Turkish and Quechua were compared the probability value might be 95 while the confidence value might be 95 clarification needed 0 probability or confidence would mean complete uncertainty Language Family Probability ConfidenceAlgonkian Gulf 50 50 Almosan and beyond 75 50 Atakapa Chitimacha 50 60 Aztec Tanoan 0 50 Coahuiltecan 85 80 Eskimo Aleut Chukotan 85 25 20 Guaicurian Hokan 0 10 Gulf 25 40 Hokan Subtiaba 90 75 Jicaque Hokan 30 25 Jicaque Subtiaba 60 80 Jicaque Tequistlatecan 65 50 Keresan and Uto Aztecan 0 60 Keresan and Zuni 40 40 Macro Mayan 86 30 25 Macro Siouan 87 20 75 Maya Chipaya 80 95 Maya Chipaya Yunga 90 95 Mexican Penutian 40 60 Misumalpan Chibchan 20 50 Mosan 60 65 Na Dene 0 25 Natchez Muskogean 40 20 Nostratic Amerind 90 75 Otomanguean Huave 25 25 Purepecha Quechua 90 80 Quechua as Hokan 85 80 Quechumaran 50 50 Sahaptian Klamath Molala 75 50 Sahaptian Klamath Tsimshian 10 10 Takelman 88 80 60 Tlapanec Subtiaba as Otomanguean 95 90 Tlingit Eyak Athabaskan 75 40 Tunican 0 20 Wakashan and Chimakuan 0 25 Yukian Gulf 85 70 Yukian Siouan 60 75 Zuni Penutian 80 50 Pronouns EditIt has long been observed that a remarkable number of Native American languages have a pronominal pattern with first person singular forms in n and second person singular forms in m Compare first person singular m and second person singular t across much of northern Eurasia as in English me and thee Spanish me and te and Hungarian m and d This pattern was first noted by Alfredo Trombetti in 1905 It caused Sapir to suggest that ultimately all Native American languages would turn out to be related In a personal letter to A L Kroeber he wrote Sapir 1918 89 Getting down to brass tacks how in the Hell are you going to explain general American n I except genetically It s disturbing I know but more non committal conservatism is only dodging after all isn t it Great simplifications are in store for us The supposed n m I you pattern has attracted attention even from those linguists who are normally critical of such long distance proposals Johanna Nichols investigated the distribution of the languages that have an n m pattern and found that they are mostly confined to the western coast of the Americas and that similarly they exist in East Asia and northern New Guinea She suggested that they had spread through diffusion 90 This notion was rejected by Lyle Campbell who argued that the frequency of the n m pattern was not statistically elevated in either area compared to the rest of the world Campbell also showed that several of the languages that have the contrast today did not have it historically and stated that the pattern was largely consistent with chance resemblance especially when taking into consideration the statistic prevalence of nasal consonants in all the pronominal systems of the world 91 Zamponi found that Nichols s findings were distorted by her small sample size and that some n m languages were recent developments though also that some languages had lost an ancestral n m pattern but he did find a statistical excess of the n m pattern in western North America only Looking at families rather than individual languages he found a rate of 30 of families protolanguages in North America all on the western flank compared to 5 in South America and 7 of non American languages though the percentage in North America and especially the even higher number in the Pacific Northwest drops considerably if Hokan and Penutian or parts of them are accepted as language families If all the proposed Penutian and Hokan languages in the table below are related then the frequency drops to 9 of North American families statistically indistinguishable from the world average 92 Below is a list of families with both 1sg n and 2sg m though in some cases the evidence for one of the forms is weak 92 Proto languages with 1sg n and 2sg m 92 Family 1sg 2sgPenutian familiesProto Tsimshianic ne me but also n Proto Chinookan nai n mai m PlateauPenutian Klamath ni I ni s my mi s you object mi your Molala in my n me im your m you object Proto Sahaptian ʔi n I ʔi m you Takelma an n aʔn ʔn ma maːCayuse iniŋ nǐs mǐs Proto Maiduan ni I nik me nik k i my mi you min you obj min k i your Proto Wintuan ni I ni s me ne r my ne t my mi you mi s obj mar your ma t your Yok utian Proto Yokutsan naʔ I nan me nam nim my maʔ you man you obj mam min your Proto Utian ka ni I ka na my 93 mi n Proto Huavean nV mɪProto Mixe Zoquean n heʔ mine n mici min Hokan familiesChimariko noʔot mamot m mKarok na I nani nini my ʔi m you mi your Coahuilteco n ami n na nak niw mak may mi Proto Yuman ʔnʸaː I nʸ maː you m Proto Lencan u nani on u na ama nani am ma mi maOther North AmericaKarankawa na n m Proto Kiowa Tanoan na wįmProto Uto Aztecan i nɨ I i nɨ my ɨ mɨ you ɨ mɨ your Proto Chibchan nasal da or na nasal ba or maSouth AmericaProto Guahiboan xa ni nV xa miProto Aymaran na ya I Na my hu ma you ma you r Mapuche iɲtʃe I ɨ n I nyi my also his her eymi you mi your m Puelche nɨ ɨn an 94 kɨ ma w mu mɨ Proto Uru Chipaya Chipaya only n am Proto Timotean Timote Cuica an Mucuchi Maripu unknown Mucuchi Maripu ma Timote Cuica ihOther scattered families may have one or the other but not both Besides Proto Eskaleut and Proto Na Dene the families in North America with neither 1sg n or 2sg m are Atakapan Chitimacha Cuitlatec Haida Kutenai Proto Caddoan Proto Chimakuan Proto Comecrudan Proto Iroquoian Proto Muskogean Proto Siouan Catawba Tonkawa Waikuri Yana Yuchi Zuni There are also a number of neighboring families in South America that have a tʃ k pattern the Duho proposal plus possibly Arutani Sape or an i a pattern the Macro Je proposal including Fulnio and Chiquitano plus Matacoan 95 Zamucoan and Payagua 92 Linguistic areas EditMain article Linguistic areas of the AmericasUnattested languages EditSeveral languages are only known by mention in historical documents or from only a few names or words It cannot be determined that these languages actually existed or that the few recorded words are actually of known or unknown languages Some may simply be from a historian s errors Others are of known people with no linguistic record sometimes due to lost records A short list is below Ais Akokisa Aranama Ausaima Avoyel Bayagoula Bidai Cacan Diaguita Calchaqui Calusa Mayaimi Tequesta Cusabo Eyeish Grigra Guale Houma Koroa Mayaca possibly related to Ais Mobila Okelousa Opelousa Pascagoula Pensacola Chatot Muscogean languages possibly related to Choctaw Pijao language Pisabo possibly the same language as Matses Quinipissa Taensa Tiou Yamacraw Yamasee Yazoo Loukotka 1968 reports the names of hundreds of South American languages which do not have any linguistic documentation Pidgins and mixed languages EditVarious miscellaneous languages such as pidgins mixed languages trade languages and sign languages are given below in alphabetical order American Indian Pidgin English Algonquian Basque pidgin also known as Micmac Basque Pidgin Souriquois spoken by the Basques Micmacs and Montagnais in eastern Canada Broken Oghibbeway also known as Broken Ojibwa Broken Slavey Bungee also known as Bungi Bungie Bungay or the Red River Dialect Callahuaya also known as Machaj Juyai Kallawaya Collahuaya Pohena Kolyawaya Jargon Carib Pidgin also known as Ndjuka Amerindian Pidgin Ndjuka Trio Carib Pidgin Arawak Mixed Language Catalangu Chinook Jargon Delaware Jargon also known as Pidgin Delaware Eskimo Trade Jargon also known as Herschel Island Eskimo Pidgin Ship s Jargon Greenlandic Pidgin West Greenlandic Pidgin Guajiro Spanish Gueguence Nicarao Haida Jargon Inuktitut English Pidgin Quebec Jargonized Powhatan Keresan Sign Language Labrador Eskimo Pidgin also known as Labrador Inuit Pidgin Lingua Franca Apalachee Lingua Franca Creek Lingua Geral Amazonica also known as Nheengatu Lingua Boa Lingua Brasilica Lingua Geral do Norte Lingua Geral do Sul also known as Lingua Geral Paulista Tupi Austral Loucheux Jargon also known as Jargon Loucheux Media Lengua Mednyj Aleut also known as Copper Island Aleut Medniy Aleut CIA Michif also known as French Cree Metis Metchif Mitchif Metchif Mobilian Jargon also known as Mobilian Trade Jargon Chickasaw Chocaw Trade Language Yama Montagnais Pidgin Basque also known as Pidgin Basque Montagnais Nootka Jargon spoken during the 18th 19th centuries later replaced by Chinook Jargon Ocaneechi also known as Occaneechee spoken in Virginia and the Carolinas in early colonial times Pidgin Massachusett Plains Indian Sign LanguageWriting systems EditWhile most Indigenous languages have adopted the Latin script as the written form of their languages a few languages have their own unique writing systems after encountering the Latin script often through missionaries that are still in use All pre Columbian Indigenous writing systems are no longer used Indigenous Writing Systems of the Americas Writing System Type Language s Region s Date in usage Status InventorQuipu N A string Aymara Quechua Puquina Andean civilizations Western South America 3rd millennium BCE 17th century ExtinctOlmec hieroglyphs Logogram Mixe Zoque languages Isthmus of Tehuantepec 1500 BCE 400 BCE ExtinctZapotec writing unknown Zapotec languages Oaxaca 500 BCE 700 CE ExtinctEpi Olmec Isthmian script Logogram Zoque languages Isthmus of Tehuantepec 500 BCE 500 CE ExtinctAbaj Takalik and Kaminaljuyu scripts unknown unknown Mixe Zoquean language Southern Guatemala ExtinctMaya script Logogram Mayan languages Maya civilization Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico Guatemala amp Belize 3rd century BCE 16th century CE ExtinctMixtec script Semasiogram 96 Mixtecan languages Oaxaca Puebla Guerrero 13th century 16th century CE ExtinctAztec script Semasiogram Nahuatl Central Mexico 14th century 16th century CE ExtinctKomqwejwi kasikl Miꞌkmaw Hieroglyphs Logogram Mi kmaq Nova Scotia Prince Edward Island amp New Brunswick 17th 19th century ExtinctCherokee syllabary Syllabary Cherokee Cherokee Nation United States 1820s present Active Sequoyah ᏍᏏᏉᏯCanadian Aboriginal syllabics Abugida Algonquian languages Cree Naskapi Ojibwe Chippewa amp Blackfoot Siksika Eskimo Aleut languages Inuktitut amp Inuinnaqtun Athabaskan languages Dane zaa Slavey Chipewyan Denesuline Sayisi Carrier Dakelh amp Sekani Canada 1840s present Active James Evans ᒉᐃᒻᔅ ᐁᕙᓐᔅYugtun script Syllabary Central Alaskan Yup ik Alaska 1900 present Endangered UyaquqAfaka syllabary Syllabary Ndyuka Suriname French Guiana 1910 present Endangered Afaka AtumisiOsage script Alphabet Osage Osage Nation United States 2006 present Active Herman Mongrain LookoutSee also Edit Indigenous peoples of the Americas portal Languages portalAmerind languages Archive of the Indigenous Languages of Latin America Classification of indigenous peoples of the Americas Classification of indigenous languages of the Americas Haplogroup Q M242 Y DNA Indigenous peoples of the Americas Language families and languages Languages of Peru List of endangered languages in Canada List of endangered languages in Mexico List of endangered languages in the United States List of endangered languages with mobile apps List of indigenous languages of South America List of indigenous languages in Argentina Mesoamerican languages Native American Languages Act of 1990Notes Edit Greenberg Joseph 1987 Language in the Americas Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 1315 3 Campbell Lyle 2000 American Indian Languages The Historical Linguistics of Native America Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 534983 2 page 253 Gordon Raymond G Jr Ed 2005 Ethnologue Languages of the World 15th ed Dallas Texas SIL International ISBN 1 55671 159 X Online version http www ethnologue com Schwartz Saul 2018 The predicament of language and culture Advocacy anthropology and dormant language communities Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 28 3 332 355 doi 10 1111 jola 12204 S2CID 150209288 Census Shows Native Languages Count Language Magazine Retrieved 2020 08 16 Population by Aboriginal mother tongue Aboriginal language spoken most often at home and Aboriginal language spoken on a regular basis at home for Canada provinces and territories Retrieved May 18 2020 Premm Hanns J Riese Berthold 1983 Coulmas Florian Ehlich Konrad eds Autochthonous American writing systems The Aztec and Mayan examples Writing in Focus Trends in Linguistics Studies and Monographs Vol 24 Berlin Mouton Publishers pp 167 169 ISBN 978 90 279 3359 1 Retrieved 15 March 2019 Wichmann Soren 2006 Mayan Historical Linguistics and Epigraphy A New Synthesis Annual Review of Anthropology 35 279 294 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 35 081705 123257 Shapiro Judith 1987 From Tupa to the Land without Evil The Christianization of Tupi Guarani Cosmology American Ethnologist 1 14 126 139 doi 10 1525 ae 1987 14 1 02a00080 Lov om Gronlands Selvstyre Kapitel 7 Sprog Law of Greenland Self Determination Chapter 7 Language PDF www stm dk Retrieved 2020 06 11 Campbell Lyle 1997 American Indian languages the historical linguistics of Native America Ch 3 The Origin of American Indian Languages pp 90 106 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509427 1 Blench Roger 2008 Accounting for the Diversity of Amerindian Languages Modelling the Settlement of the New World Paper presented at the Archaeology Research Seminar RSPAS Canberra Australia Ethnologue 2021 Ethnologue 2021 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Ethnologue 2021 Ethnologue 2021 Ethnologue 2021 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Ethnologue 2021 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Ethnologue 2021 Ethnologue 2021 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Ethnologue 2021 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Ethnologue 2021 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Ethnologue 2021 Language Highlight Tables 2016 Census Aboriginal mother tongue Aboriginal language spoken most often at home and Other Aboriginal language s spoken regularly at home for the population excluding institutional residents of Canada provinces and territories 2016 Census 100 Data Canada Statistics 2017 08 02 Retrieved 2017 11 22 Greenland s statistics www stat gl Retrieved 2020 06 11 Ethnologue 2021 Ethnologue 2021 a b c d e f g h Brasil tem cinco linguas indigenas com mais de 10 mil falantes Agencia Brasil in Brazilian Portuguese 2014 12 11 Retrieved 2020 08 30 Census in Brief The Aboriginal languages of First Nations people Metis and Inuit Statistics Canada 25 October 2017 Retrieved 2017 11 12 Shuar at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 a b c d The Blackfoot Language Resources and Digital Dictionary project Creating integrated web resources for language documentation and revitalization PDF p 277 Retrieved 2020 06 11 Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Language Highlight Tables 2016 Census Aboriginal mother tongue Aboriginal language spoken most often at home and Other Aboriginal language s spoken regularly at home for the population excluding institutional residents of Canada provinces and territories 2016 Census 100 Data www12 statcan gc ca Government of Canada Statistics 2 August 2017 Retrieved 2017 11 22 Ethnologue 21st ed 2018 Ethnologue 19th ed 2016 Hofling Mopan Maya Spanish English Dictionary 1 Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 PROTO MACRO JE UM ESTUDO RECONSTRUTIVO PDF a b c d e f g h i j k l IBGE Indigenous languages census PDF Ethnologue 21st ed 2018 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Mohawk Ethnologue Retrieved 2018 06 09 Canada Government of Canada Statistics 28 March 2018 Aboriginal Mother Tongue 90 Single and Multiple Mother Tongue Responses 3 Aboriginal Identity 9 Registered or Treaty Indian Status 3 and Age 12 for the Population in Private Households of Canada Provinces and Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2016 Census 25 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2018 06 09 Idiomas indigenas Macuxi e Wapixana sao oficializados em municipio de Roraima Amazonia org in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 2020 10 26 Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 Canada Government of Canada Statistics 28 March 2018 Aboriginal Mother Tongue 90 Single and Multiple Mother Tongue Responses 3 Aboriginal Identity 9 Registered or Treaty Indian Status 3 and Age 12 for the Population in Private Households of Canada Provinces and Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2016 Census 25 Sample Data www12 statcan gc ca Retrieved 2018 06 09 UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in danger www unesco org Retrieved 2018 06 09 UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in danger www unesco org Retrieved 2018 06 09 Cocopah at Ethnologue 19th ed 2016 Havasupai Walapai Yavapai at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 INALI 2012 Mexico Lenguas indigenas nacionales Kumiai Ethnologue Retrieved 2018 04 14 Ethnologue 21st ed 2018 Quechan at Ethnologue 19th ed 2016 Yavapai at Ethnologue 19th ed 2016 Mojave language at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 INALI 2012 Mexico Lenguas indigenas nacionales Language Highlight Tables 2016 Census Aboriginal mother tongue Aboriginal language spoken most often at home and Other Aboriginal language s spoken regularly at home for the population excluding institutional residents of Canada provinces and territories 2016 Census 100 Data www12 statcan gc ca Government of Canada 2 August 2017 Retrieved 2017 11 23 Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 Estadistica basica de la poblacion hablante de lenguas indigenas nacionales 2015 PDF site inali gob mx Retrieved 2020 06 11 UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in danger www unesco org Retrieved 2018 05 20 If the Caucasus is considered to be a part of Europe Northwest Caucasian and Northeast Caucasian would be included resulting in five language families within Europe Other language families such as the Turkic Mongolic Afroasiatic families have entered Europe in later migrations Nater 1984 pg 5 Ruhlen Merritt 1991 1987 A Guide to the World s Languages Volume 1 Classification p 216 Edward Arnold Paperback ISBN 0 340 56186 6 Campbell Lyle 1997 American Indian languages the historical linguistics of Native America Ch 8 Distant Genetic Relationships pp 260 329 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509427 1 American Arctic Paleosiberian Phylum Luoravetlan and beyond Macro Mayan includes Mayan Totonacan Mixe Zoquean and sometimes Huave Siouan Iroquoian Caddoan Yuchi Alternatively Takelma Kalapuyan See Sapir 1918 Nichols amp Peterson 1996 Campbell 1997 a b c d Raoul Zamponi 2017 First person n and second person m in Native America a fresh look Italian Journal of Linguistics 29 2 possibly from ni and na Proto Chonan proper sans Puelche has only 2sg maː Guaicuruan has 1sg i only Writing Systems of Mesoamerica PDF El Camino College s Student Equity and Achievement Program El Camino College Retrieved 30 June 2022 Bibliography EditBright William 1984 The classification of North American and Meso American Indian languages In W Bright Ed American Indian linguistics and literature pp 3 29 Berlin Mouton de Gruyter Bright William Ed 1984 American Indian linguistics and literature Berlin Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 3 11 009846 6 Brinton Daniel G 1891 The American race New York D C Hodges Campbell Lyle 1997 American Indian languages The historical linguistics of Native America New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509427 1 Campbell Lyle amp Mithun Marianne Eds 1979 The languages of native America Historical and comparative assessment Austin University of Texas Press North America Edit Boas Franz 1911 Handbook of American Indian languages Vol 1 Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 40 Washington Government Print Office Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology on archive org Boas Franz 1922 Handbook of American Indian languages Vol 2 Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 40 Washington Government Print Office Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology on archive org Boas Franz 1929 Classification of American Indian languages Language 5 1 7 Boas Franz 1933 Handbook of American Indian languages Vol 3 Native American legal materials collection title 1227 Gluckstadt J J Augustin on archive org Bright William 1973 North American Indian language contact In T A Sebeok Ed Linguistics in North America part 1 pp 713 726 Current trends in linguistics Vol 10 The Hauge Mouton Goddard Ives Ed 1996 Languages Handbook of North American Indians W C Sturtevant General Ed Vol 17 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution ISBN 0 16 048774 9 Goddard Ives 1999 Native languages and language families of North America rev and enlarged ed with additions and corrections Map Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press Smithsonian Institution Updated version of the map in Goddard 1996 ISBN 0 8032 9271 6 Goddard Ives 2005 The indigenous languages of the southeast Anthropological Linguistics 47 1 1 60 Mithun Marianne 1990 Studies of North American Indian Languages Annual Review of Anthropology 19 1 309 330 Mithun Marianne 1999 The languages of Native North America Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23228 7 hbk ISBN 0 521 29875 X Nater Hank F 1984 The Bella Coola Language Mercury Series Canadian Ethnology Service No 92 Ottawa National Museums of Canada Powell John W 1891 Indian linguistic families of America north of Mexico Seventh annual report Bureau of American Ethnology pp 1 142 Washington D C Government Printing Office Reprinted in P Holder Ed 1966 Introduction to Handbook of American Indian languages by Franz Boas and Indian linguistic families of America north of Mexico by J W Powell Lincoln University of Nebraska Powell John W 1915 Linguistic families of American Indians north of Mexico by J W Powell revised by members of the staff of the Bureau of American Ethnology Map Bureau of American Ethnology miscellaneous publication No 11 Baltimore Hoen Sebeok Thomas A Ed 1973 Linguistics in North America parts 1 amp 2 Current trends in linguistics Vol 10 The Hauge Mouton Reprinted as Sebeok 1976 Sebeok Thomas A Ed 1976 Native languages of the Americas New York Plenum Sherzer Joel 1973 Areal linguistics in North America In T A Sebeok Ed Linguistics in North America part 2 pp 749 795 Current trends in linguistics Vol 10 The Hauge Mouton Reprinted in Sebeok 1976 Sherzer Joel 1976 An areal typological study of American Indian languages north of Mexico Amsterdam North Holland Sletcher Michael North American Indians in Will Kaufman and Heidi Macpherson eds Britain and the Americas Culture Politics and History 2 vols Oxford 2005 Sturtevant William C Ed 1978 present Handbook of North American Indians Vol 1 20 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Vols 1 3 16 18 20 not yet published Vaas Rudiger Die Sprachen der Ureinwohner In Stoll Gunter Vaas Rudiger Spurensuche im Indianerland Hirzel Stuttgart 2001 chapter 7 Voegelin Carl F amp Voegelin Florence M 1965 Classification of American Indian languages Languages of the world Native American fasc 2 sec 1 6 Anthropological Linguistics 7 7 121 150 Zepeda Ofelia Hill Jane H 1991 The condition of Native American Languages in the United States In R H Robins amp E M Uhlenbeck Eds Endangered languages pp 135 155 Oxford Berg South America Edit Adelaar Willem F H amp Muysken Pieter C 2004 The languages of the Andes Cambridge language surveys Cambridge University Press Fabre Alain 1998 Manual de las lenguas indigenas sudamericanas I II Munchen Lincom Europa Kaufman Terrence 1990 Language history in South America What we know and how to know more In D L Payne Ed Amazonian linguistics Studies in lowland South American languages pp 13 67 Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 70414 3 Kaufman Terrence 1994 The native languages of South America In C Mosley amp R E Asher Eds Atlas of the world s languages pp 46 76 London Routledge Key Mary R 1979 The grouping of South American languages Tubingen Gunter Narr Verlag Loukotka Cestmir 1968 Classification of South American Indian languages Los Angeles Latin American Studies Center University of California Mason J Alden 1950 The languages of South America In J Steward Ed Handbook of South American Indians Vol 6 pp 157 317 Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology bulletin No 143 Washington D C Government Printing Office Migliazza Ernest C amp Campbell Lyle 1988 Panorama general de las lenguas indigenas en America Historia general de America Vol 10 Caracas Instituto Panamericano de Geografia e Historia Rodrigues Aryon 1986 Linguas brasileiras Para o conhecimento das linguas indigenas Sao Paulo Edicoes Loyola Rowe John H 1954 Linguistics classification problems in South America In M B Emeneau Ed Papers from the symposium on American Indian linguistics pp 10 26 University of California publications in linguistics Vol 10 Berkeley University of California Press Sapir Edward 1929 Central and North American languages In The encyclopaedia britannica A new survey of universal knowledge 14 ed Vol 5 pp 138 141 London The Encyclopaedia Britannica Company Ltd Voegelin Carl F amp Voegelin Florence M 1977 Classification and index of the world s languages Amsterdam Elsevier ISBN 0 444 00155 7 Debian North American Indigenous Languages ProjectExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Indigenous languages of the Americas Catalogo de linguas indigenas sul americanas Diccionario etnolinguistico y guia bibliografica de los pueblos indigenas sudamericanos Towards a general typology of South American indigenous languages A bibliographical database South American Languages Indigenous Peoples Languages Articles News Videos Documentation Center of the Linguistic Minorities of Panama The Archive of the Indigenous Languages of Latin America Indigenous Language Institute The Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas SSILA Southern Oregon Digital Archives First Nations Tribal Collection collection of ethnographic linguistic amp historical material Center for the Study of the Native Languages of the Plains and Southwest Project for the Documentation of the Languages of Mesoamerica Programa de Formacion en Educacion Intercultural Bilingue para los Paises Andinos Native American Language Center University of California at Davis Native Languages of the Americas International Journal of American Linguistics Our Languages Saskatchewan Indian Cultural Centre Swadesh Lists of Brazilian Native Languages Alaska Native Language Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indigenous languages of the Americas amp oldid 1131912843, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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