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Language isolate

A language isolate is a language that has no demonstrable genetic relationship with another language.[1] Basque in Europe, Ainu[1] in Asia, Sandawe in Africa, Haida and Zuni in North America, Kanoê in South America, and Tiwi in Australia are all examples of language isolates. The exact number of language isolates is yet unknown due to insufficient data on several languages.[2]

Locations of a few relatively well-known examples of isolated languages

One explanation for the existence of language isolates is that they might be the last remaining branch of a larger language family. The language possibly had relatives in the past which have since disappeared without being documented. Another explanation for language isolates is that they developed in isolation from other languages. This explanation mostly applies to sign languages that have arisen independently of other spoken or signed languages.[1][3]

Some languages once seen as isolates may be reclassified as small families if some of their dialects are judged to be sufficiently different from the standard to be seen as different languages. Examples include Japanese and Georgian: Japanese is now part of the Japonic language family with the Ryukyuan languages, and Georgian is the main language in the Kartvelian language family. There is a difference between language isolates and unclassified languages, but they can be difficult to differentiate when it comes to classifying extinct languages.[1] If such efforts eventually do prove fruitful, a language previously considered an isolate may no longer be considered one, as happened with the Yanyuwa language of northern Australia, which has been placed in the Pama–Nyungan family.[4] Since linguists do not always agree on whether a genetic relationship has been demonstrated, it is often disputed whether a language is an isolate.

Genetic relationships edit

A genetic relationship is when two different languages are descended from a common ancestral language.[5] This is what makes up a language family, which is a set of languages for which sufficient evidence exists to demonstrate that they descend from a single ancestral language and are therefore genetically related.[1] For example, English is related to other Indo-European languages and Mandarin Chinese is related to other Sino-Tibetan languages. By this criterion, each language isolate constitutes a family of its own.[5]

In some situations, a language with no ancestor can arise. This frequently happens with sign languages—most famously in the case of Nicaraguan Sign Language, where deaf children with no language were placed together and developed a new language.[6]

Extinct isolates edit

Caution is required when speaking of extinct languages as language isolates. Despite their great age, Sumerian and Elamite can be safely classified as isolates, as the languages are well enough documented that, if modern relatives existed, they would be recognizably related.[7] A language thought to be an isolate may turn out to be related to other languages once enough material is recovered, but this is unlikely for extinct languages whose written records have not been preserved.[1]

Many extinct languages are very poorly attested which may lead to them being considered unclassified languages instead of language isolates. This occurs when linguists do not have enough information on a language to classify it as either a language isolate or as a part of another language family.[1]

Isolates v. unclassified languages edit

Unclassified languages are different from language isolates in that they have no demonstrable genetic relationships to other languages due to a lack of sufficient data. In order to be considered a language isolate, a language needs to have sufficient data for comparisons with other languages through methods of historical-comparative linguistics to show that it does not have any genetic relationships.[1]

Many extinct languages and living languages today are very poorly attested, and the fact that they cannot be linked to other languages may be a reflection of our poor knowledge of them. Hattic, Gutian, and Kassite are all considered unclassified languages, but their status is disputed by a minority of linguists.[8] Many extinct languages of the Americas such as Cayuse and Majena may likewise have been isolates.[9] Several unclassified languages could also be language isolates, but linguists cannot be sure of this without sufficient evidence.[1]

Sign language isolates edit

A number of sign languages have arisen independently, without any ancestral language, and thus are language isolates. The most famous of these is the Nicaraguan Sign Language, a well documented case of what has happened in schools for the deaf in many countries.[6] In Tanzania, for example, there are seven schools for the deaf, each with its own sign language with no known connection to any other language.[10] Sign languages have also developed outside schools, in communities with high incidences of deafness, such as Kata Kolok in Bali, and half a dozen sign languages of the hill tribes in Thailand including the Ban Khor Sign Language.[11][12]

These and more are all presumed isolates or small local families, because many deaf communities are made up of people whose hearing parents do not use sign language, and have manifestly, as shown by the language itself, not borrowed their sign language from other deaf communities during the recorded history of these languages.[11]

Reclassification edit

Some languages once seen as isolates may be reclassified as small families because their genetic relationship to other languages has been established. This happened with Japanese and Ryukyuan languages, Korean and Koreanic languages, Atakapa and Akokisa languages, Tol and Jicaque of El Palmar languages, and the Xincan Guatemala language family in which linguists have grouped the Chiquimulilla, Guazacapán, Jumaytepeque, and Yupiltepeque languages.[1]

List of language isolates by continent edit

Below is a list of known language isolates, arranged by continent, along with notes on possible relations to other languages or language families.

The status column indicates the degree of endangerment of the language, according to the definitions of the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.[13] "Vibrant" languages are those in full use by speakers of every generation, with consistent native acquisition by children. "Vulnerable" languages have a similarly wide base of native speakers, but a restricted use and the long-term risk of language shift. "Endangered" languages are either acquired irregularly or spoken only by older generations. "Moribund" languages have only a few remaining native speakers, with no new acquisition, highly restricted use, and near-universal multilingualism. "Extinct" languages have no native speakers, but are sufficiently documented to be classified as isolates.

Africa edit

With few exceptions, all of Africa's languages have been gathered into four major phyla: Afroasiatic, Niger–Congo, Nilo-Saharan and Khoisan.[14] However, the genetic unity of some language families, like Nilo-Saharan,[15][16] is questionable, and so there may be many more language families and isolates than currently accepted. Data for several African languages, like Kwisi, are not sufficient for classification. In addition, Jalaa, Shabo, Laal, Kujargé, and a few other languages within Nilo-Saharan and Afroasiatic-speaking areas may turn out to be isolates upon further investigation. Defaka and Ega are highly divergent languages located within Niger–Congo-speaking areas, and may also possibly be language isolates.[17]

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Bangime 2,000 Vibrant Mali Spoken in the Bandiagara Escarpment. Used as an anti-language.[18]
Hadza 1,000 Vulnerable Tanzania Spoken on the southern shore of Lake Eyasi in the southwest of Arusha Region. Once listed as an outlier among the Khoisan languages.[19] Language use is vigorous, though there are fewer than 1,000 speakers.[20]
Jalaa Extinct Nigeria Strongly influenced by Dikaka, but most vocabulary is very unusual.[21]
Laal 750 Moribund Chad Spoken in three villages along the Chari River in Moyen-Chari Region. Poorly known. Also known as Gori. Possibly a distinct branch of Niger–Congo, Chadic of the Afroasiatic languages, or mixed.[citation needed]
Sandawe 60,000 Vibrant Tanzania Spoken in the northwest of Dodoma Region. Tentatively linked to the Khoe languages.[19]
Shabo 400 Endangered Ethiopia Spoken in Anderaccha, Gecha, and Kaabo of the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region. Linked to the Gumuz and Koman families in the proposed Komuz branch of the Nilo-Saharan languages.[22]

Asia edit

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Burushaski 300,000[23] Vulnerable Pakistan Spoken in the Yasin Valley and Hunza Valley of Gilgit-Baltistan. Linked to Caucasian languages,[24] Indo-European,[25][26] and Na-Dene languages[27][28] in various proposals.
Elamite Extinct Iran Formerly spoken in Elam, along the northeast coast of the Persian Gulf. Attested from around 2800 BC to 300 BC.[29] Some propose a relationship to the Dravidian languages (see Elamo-Dravidian), but this is not well-supported.[30]
Kusunda At least 1 (2023)[31] Moribund Nepal Spoken in Gandaki Province. The recent discovery of a few speakers shows that it is not demonstrably related to anything else.[32]
Puroik[33] 20,000 Vulnerable India
Nihali 2,000 Endangered India Also known as Nahali. Spoken in northeastern Maharashtra and southwestern Madhya Pradesh, along the Tapti River. Strong lexical Munda influence from Korku.[34] Used as anti-language by speakers.[35]
Nivkh 200 Moribund Russia Also known as Gilyak. Spoken in the lower Amur River basin and in the northern part of Sakhalin. Dialects sometimes considered two languages.[36] Has been linked to Chukotko-Kamchatkan languages.[37]
Sumerian Extinct Iraq Spoken in Mesopotamia until around 1800 BC, but used as a classical language until 100 AD.[38] Long-extinct but well-attested language of ancient Sumer.
Tambora Extinct Indonesia Poorly documented, extinct since the 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora, basic vocabulary points towards it being an isolate.

Oceania edit

Current research considers that the "Papuasphere" centered in New Guinea includes as many as 37 isolates.[39] (The more is known about these languages in the future, the more likely it is for these languages to be later assigned to a known language family.) To these, one must add several isolates found among non-Pama-Nyungan languages of Australia:[40]

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Abinomn 300 Vibrant Indonesia Spoken in the far north of New Guinea. Also known as Bas or Foia. Language is considered safe by UNESCO but endangered by Ethnologue.[41]
Anêm 800 Papua New Guinea Spoken on the northwest coast of New Britain.[42] Perhaps related to Yélî Dnye and Ata.[43]
Ata 2,000 Spoken in the central highlands of New Britain. Also known as Wasi. Perhaps related to Yélî Dnye and Anem.[44][45]
Busa 370 Spoken in Sandaun Province, northwestern Papua New Guinea. Added to Senu River.[46]
Giimbiyu Extinct Australia Spoken in the northern part of Arnhem Land until the early 1980s. Sometimes considered a small language family consisting of Mengerrdji, Urningangk and Erre.[47] Part of a proposal for the undemonstrated Arnhem Land language family.
Kol 4,000 Vibrant Papua New Guinea Spoken in the northeastern part of New Britain. Possibly related to the poorly-known Sulka, or the Baining languages, suggested as part of the East Papuan languages.[48][49]
Kuot 2,400 Vulnerable Papua New Guinea Spoken on New Ireland. Also known as Panaras. Suggested to form part of the East Papuan family.[49]
Malak-Malak 10 Moribund Australia Spoken in northern Australia. Often considered part of one Northern Daly family together with Tyeraity. Used to be considered genetically related to the Wagaydyic languages, but nowadays they are considered genetically distinct.[50]
Murrinh-patha 1,973 Vibrant Spoken on the eastern coast of Joseph Bonaparte Gulf in the Top End. The proposed linkage to Ngan'gityemerri in one Southern Daly family[51] is generally accepted to be valid.
Mpur 5000 Vibrant Indonesia Spoken in the Mpur and Amberbaken Districts, Tambrauw Regency on the north coast of the Bird's Head Peninsula.
Ngan'gityemerri 26 Moribund Australia Spoken in the Top End along the Daly River. The proposed linkage to Murrinh-patha in one Southern Daly family[51] is generally accepted to be valid.
Pyu 250 Vibrant Papua New Guinea Spoken in Green River Rural LLG in Sandaun Province, near the Indonesian border. Linked to neighboring Left May and Amto-Musan in a proposed Arai-Samaia family.[52]
Sulka 2,500–3,000 Vibrant New Britain, Papua New Guinea Possible language isolate spoken across the eastern end of New Britain. Poorly attested. Suggested to form part of the East Papuan family.[49]
Tayap >50 Moribund Papua New Guinea Formerly spoken in the village of Gapun. Links to Lower Sepik languages and Torricelli languages have been explored, but the general consensus among Linguists is that it is an isolate unrelated to surrounding languages.[53]
Tiwi 2,040 Vulnerable Australia Spoken in the Tiwi Islands in the Timor Sea. Traditionally Tiwi is polysynthetic, but the Tiwi spoken by younger generations is not.[54]
Wagiman 11 Moribund Spoken in the southern part of the Top End. May be distantly related to the Yangmanic languages,[55] which might in turn be a member of the Macro-Gunwinyguan family,[40] but neither link has been demonstrated.
Wardaman 50 Spoken in the southern part of the Top End. The extinct and poorly-attested Dagoman and Yangman dialects are sometimes treated as separate languages, forming a Yangmanic family, to which Wagiman may be distantly related.[55] Possibly a member of the Macro-Gunwinyguan family,[40] but this has yet to be demonstrated.

Europe edit

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Basque 751,500 (2016),[56] 1,185,500 passive speakers Vulnerable Spain, France Natively known as Euskara, the Basque language is found in the historical region of the Basque Country between France and Spain. It has no known living relatives, although Aquitanian is commonly regarded as related to or a direct ancestor of Basque. Some linguists have claimed similarities with various languages of the Caucasus[57][58] that are indicative of a relationship, while others have proposed a relation to Iberian[59] and to the hypothetical Dené–Caucasian languages.[60]

North America edit

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Alsea Extinct United States Poorly attested. Spoken along the central coast of Oregon until the early 1950s.[61] Sometimes regarded as two separate languages. Often included in the Penutian hypothesis in a Coast Oregon Penutian branch.[62]
Atakapa Spoken on the Gulf coast of eastern Texas and southwestern Louisiana until the early 1900s. Often linked to Muskogean in a Gulf hypothesis.[63]
Chimariko Spoken in northern California until the 1950s.[64] Part of the Hokan hypothesis.[65]
Chitimacha Well-attested. Spoken along the Gulf coast of southeastern Louisiana until 1940.[66] Possibly in the Totozoquean family of Mesoamerica.[66]
Coahuilteco United States, Mexico Spoken in southern Texas and northeastern Mexico until the 1700s. Part of the Pakawan hypothesis,[67] has been linked to the hypothesised Hokan languages in a larger group.[68]
Cuitlatec Mexico Spoken in northern Guerrero until the 1960s.[69] Has been proposed to be part of Macro-Chibchan[70] and Uto-Aztecan.[69]
Esselen United States Poorly known. Spoken in the Big Sur region of California until the early 1800s. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.[71]
Haida 24 Moribund Canada, United States Spoken in the Haida Gwaii archipelago off the northwest coast of British Columbia, and the southern islands of the Alexander Archipelago in southeastern Alaska. Some proposals connect it to the Na-Dené languages, but these have fallen into disfavor.[72]
Huave 20,000 Endangered Mexico Spoken in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, in the southeast of Oaxaca state. Has been linked to various language families, but is still generally considered an isolate.[73]
Karuk 12 Moribund United States Spoken along the Klamath River in northwestern California. Part of the Hokan hypothesis, but little evidence for this.[73]
Keres 13,190 Endangered Spoken in several pueblos throughout New Mexico, including Cochiti and Acoma Pueblos. Has two main dialects: Eastern and Western. Sometimes those two dialects are separated into languages in a Keresan family.[74]
Kutenai 345 Moribund Canada, United States Spoken in the Rockies of northeastern Idaho, northwestern Montana and southeastern British Columbia. Attempts have been made to place it in a Macro-Algic or Macro-Salishan family, but these have not gained significant support.[73]
Natchez Extinct United States Spoken in southern Mississippi and eastern Louisiana until 1957.[75] Often linked to Muskogean in a Gulf hypothesis.[76] Attempts at revival have produced six people with some fluency.[77]
Purépecha 140,000 Endangered Mexico Spoken in the north of Michoacán state. Language of the ancient Tarascan kingdom. Sometimes regarded as two languages.[73]
Salinan Extinct United States Spoken along the south-central coast of California. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.[78]
Seri 720 Vulnerable Mexico Spoken along the coast of the Gulf of California, in the southwest of Sonora state. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.[79]
Siuslaw Extinct United States Spoken on the southwest coast of Oregon until 1960. Likely related to Alsea, Coosan languages, or possibly the Wintuan languages. Part of the Penutian hypothesis.[62]
Takelma Spoken in western Oregon until mid 20th century.[80] Part of the Penutian hypothesis.[80]
Timucua Well attested. Spoken in northern Florida and southern Georgia until the mid- to late 1700s. Briefly spoken in Cuba by a migrant community established in 1763. A connection with the poorly known Tawasa language has been suggested, but this may be a dialect.[81]
Tonkawa Spoken in central and northern Texas until the early 1940s.[citation needed]
Tunica Spoken in western Mississippi, northeastern Louisiana, and southeastern Arkansas until 1948. Attempts at revitalization have produced 32 second-language speakers.[citation needed]
Washo 20 Moribund Spoken along the Truckee River in the Sierra Nevada of eastern California and northwestern Nevada. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.[82]
Yana Extinct Well-attested. Spoken in northern California until 1916. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.[83]
Yuchi 4 Moribund Spoken in Oklahoma, but formerly spoken in eastern Tennessee. A connection to the Siouan languages has been proposed.[84]
Zuni 9,620 Vulnerable Spoken in Zuni Pueblo in northwestern New Mexico. Links to Penutian[85] and Keres[86] have been proposed.

South America edit

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Aikanã 200 Endangered Brazil Spoken in the Amazon of eastern Rondônia. Links to Kanoê and Kwaza have been tentatively proposed.[87] Arawakan has been suggested.[citation needed]
Andoque 370 Colombia, Peru Spoken on the upper reaches of the Japurá River. Extinct in Peru. Possibly Witotoan.[88]
Betoi Extinct Venezuela Spoken in the Apure River basin near the Colombian border until the 18th century. Paezan has been suggested.[88]
Candoshi-Shapra 1,100 Endangered Peru Spoken along the Chapuli, Huitoyacu, Pastaza, and Morona river valleys in southwestern Loreto. Has been linked to various language families, but no agreement exists on its classification.[89]
Canichana Extinct Bolivia Spoken in the Llanos de Moxos region of Beni Department until around 2000. Connections with various language families have been proposed, none widely accepted.[90]
Cayuvava 4 Moribund Spoken in the Amazon west of Mamore River, north of Santa Ana del Yacuma in the Beni Department.[91]
Chimane 5,300 Vulnerable Spoken along the Beni river in Beni Department. Also spelled Tsimané. Sometimes split into multiple languages in a Moséten family. Linked to the Chonan languages in a Moseten-Chonan hypothesis.[92]
Chiquitano 5,900 Endangered Bolivia, Brazil Spoken in the eastern part of Santa Cruz department and the southwestern part of Mato Grosso state. Has been linked to the Macro-Jê family.[93][94]
Cofán 2,400 Colombia, Ecuador Spoken in northern Sucumbíos Province and southern Putumayo Department. Also called A'ingae.[95] Sometimes classified as Chibchan, but the similarities appear to be due to borrowings. Seriously endangered in Colombia.[96]
Fulniô 1,000 Moribund Brazil Spoken in the states of Paraíba, Pernambuco, Alagoas, Sergipe, and the northern part of Bahia. Divided into two dialects, Fulniô and Yatê.[97] Sometimes classified as a Macro-Jê language.[98][99]
Guató 6 Spoken in the far south of Mato Grosso near the Bolivian border. Has been classified as Macro-Jê, but this is disputed.[100]
Itonama 5 Bolivia Spoken in the far-eastern part of Beni Department. A relationship to Paezan has been suggested.[101]
Kamëntsá 4,000 Endangered Colombia Spoken in Sibundoy in the Putumayo Department. Also known as Camsa, Coche, Sibundoy, Kamentxa, Kamse, or Camëntsëá.[citation needed]
Kanoê 5 Moribund Brazil Spoken in southeastern Rondônia. Also known as Kapishana. Tentatively linked to Kwaza and Aikanã.[87] Part of a Macro-Paesan proposal.[102]
Kunza Extinct Chile Spoken in areas near Salar de Atacama until the 1950s. Also known as Atacameño. Part of a Macro-Paesan proposal.[102]
Kwaza 54 Moribund Brazil Spoken in eastern Rondônia. Connections have been proposed with Aikanã and Kanoê.[87]
Leco 20 Bolivia Spoken at the foot of the Andes in the department of La Paz.[103]
Mapuche 260,000 Vulnerable Chile, Argentina Spoken in areas of the far-southern Andes and in the Chiloé Archipelago. Also known as Mapudungun, Araucano or Araucanian.[104] Variously part of Andean,[70] Macro-Panoan,[102] or Mataco–Guaicuru[105] proposals. Sometimes Huilliche is treated as a separate language, reclassifying Mapuche into an Araucanian family.[106]
Munichi Extinct Peru Spoken in the southern part of Loreto Region until the late 1990s. Possibly evolved either from a mixed language or a sister language to Proto-Arawak.[107]
Movima 1,400 Vulnerable Bolivia Spoken in the Llanos de Moxos, in the north of Beni Department. Affiliations with Canichana, Chibcha and Macro-Tucanoan have been proposed, none of these have been proven.[108]
Oti Extinct Brazil Spoken in São Paulo until the early 1900s. Macro-Jê has been suggested.[109]
Páez 60,000 Vulnerable Colombia Spoken in the northern part of Cauca Department. Several proposed relationships in the Paezan hypothesis but nothing conclusive.[110]
Puelche Extinct Argentina, Chile Spoken in the Pampas region, last speaker died around 1960.[111] Sometimes linked to Het, as part of the Chonan languages.[112] Included in a proposed Macro-Jibaro family.[113]
Tequiraca Peru Spoken in the central part of Loreto until the 1950s. Also known as Auishiri. A connection with Canichana has been proposed.[citation needed]
Trumai 50 Moribund Brazil Settled on the upper Xingu River. Currently reside in the Xingu National Park in the northern part of Mato Grosso.[114]
Urarina 3,000 Vulnerable Peru Spoken in the central part of the Loreto Region.[115] Part of the Macro-Jibaro proposal.[116]
Waorani 2,000 Ecuador, Peru Also known as Sabela. Spoken between the Napo and Curaray rivers. Could be spoken by several groups living in isolation.[117]
Warao 28,000 Endangered Guyana, Suriname and Venezuela Spoken in the Orinoco Delta. Sometimes linked to Paezan.[102]
Yaghan Extinct Chile Spoken in far-southern Tierra del Fuego until 2022. Also called Yámana.[118]
Yaruro 7,900 Vibrant Venezuela Spoken along the Orinoco, Cinaruco, Meta, and Apure rivers. Linked to the extinct Esmeralda language.[119]
Yuracaré 2,700 Endangered Bolivia Spoken in the foothills of the Andes, in Cochabamba and Beni Departments. Connections to Mosetenan, Pano–Tacanan, Arawakan, and Chonan have been suggested.[120]

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Campbell, Lyle, ed. 2017. Language Isolates. Routledge.
  • Campbell, Lyle. (1997). American Indian languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509427-1.
  • 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, NE: University of Nebraska Press (Smithsonian Institution). (Updated version of the map in Goddard 1996). ISBN 0-8032-9271-6.
  • Grimes, Barbara F. (Ed.). (2000). Ethnologue: Languages of the world, (14th ed.). Dallas, TX: SIL International. ISBN 1-55671-106-9. (Online edition: Ethnologue: Languages of the World).
  • Mithun, Marianne. (1999). The languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23228-7 (hbk); ISBN 0-521-29875-X.
  • 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).

External links edit

  • Ethnologue's list of language isolates

language, isolate, language, isolate, language, that, demonstrable, genetic, relationship, with, another, language, basque, europe, ainu, asia, sandawe, africa, haida, zuni, north, america, kanoê, south, america, tiwi, australia, examples, language, isolates, . A language isolate is a language that has no demonstrable genetic relationship with another language 1 Basque in Europe Ainu 1 in Asia Sandawe in Africa Haida and Zuni in North America Kanoe in South America and Tiwi in Australia are all examples of language isolates The exact number of language isolates is yet unknown due to insufficient data on several languages 2 Locations of a few relatively well known examples of isolated languagesNot to be confused with Isolating language One explanation for the existence of language isolates is that they might be the last remaining branch of a larger language family The language possibly had relatives in the past which have since disappeared without being documented Another explanation for language isolates is that they developed in isolation from other languages This explanation mostly applies to sign languages that have arisen independently of other spoken or signed languages 1 3 Some languages once seen as isolates may be reclassified as small families if some of their dialects are judged to be sufficiently different from the standard to be seen as different languages Examples include Japanese and Georgian Japanese is now part of the Japonic language family with the Ryukyuan languages and Georgian is the main language in the Kartvelian language family There is a difference between language isolates and unclassified languages but they can be difficult to differentiate when it comes to classifying extinct languages 1 If such efforts eventually do prove fruitful a language previously considered an isolate may no longer be considered one as happened with the Yanyuwa language of northern Australia which has been placed in the Pama Nyungan family 4 Since linguists do not always agree on whether a genetic relationship has been demonstrated it is often disputed whether a language is an isolate Contents 1 Genetic relationships 2 Extinct isolates 3 Isolates v unclassified languages 4 Sign language isolates 5 Reclassification 6 List of language isolates by continent 6 1 Africa 6 2 Asia 6 3 Oceania 6 4 Europe 6 5 North America 6 6 South America 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksGenetic relationships editMain article Genetic relationship linguistics A genetic relationship is when two different languages are descended from a common ancestral language 5 This is what makes up a language family which is a set of languages for which sufficient evidence exists to demonstrate that they descend from a single ancestral language and are therefore genetically related 1 For example English is related to other Indo European languages and Mandarin Chinese is related to other Sino Tibetan languages By this criterion each language isolate constitutes a family of its own 5 In some situations a language with no ancestor can arise This frequently happens with sign languages most famously in the case of Nicaraguan Sign Language where deaf children with no language were placed together and developed a new language 6 Extinct isolates editCaution is required when speaking of extinct languages as language isolates Despite their great age Sumerian and Elamite can be safely classified as isolates as the languages are well enough documented that if modern relatives existed they would be recognizably related 7 A language thought to be an isolate may turn out to be related to other languages once enough material is recovered but this is unlikely for extinct languages whose written records have not been preserved 1 Many extinct languages are very poorly attested which may lead to them being considered unclassified languages instead of language isolates This occurs when linguists do not have enough information on a language to classify it as either a language isolate or as a part of another language family 1 Isolates v unclassified languages editUnclassified languages are different from language isolates in that they have no demonstrable genetic relationships to other languages due to a lack of sufficient data In order to be considered a language isolate a language needs to have sufficient data for comparisons with other languages through methods of historical comparative linguistics to show that it does not have any genetic relationships 1 Many extinct languages and living languages today are very poorly attested and the fact that they cannot be linked to other languages may be a reflection of our poor knowledge of them Hattic Gutian and Kassite are all considered unclassified languages but their status is disputed by a minority of linguists 8 Many extinct languages of the Americas such as Cayuse and Majena may likewise have been isolates 9 Several unclassified languages could also be language isolates but linguists cannot be sure of this without sufficient evidence 1 Sign language isolates editFurther information Deaf community sign language and Village sign language A number of sign languages have arisen independently without any ancestral language and thus are language isolates The most famous of these is the Nicaraguan Sign Language a well documented case of what has happened in schools for the deaf in many countries 6 In Tanzania for example there are seven schools for the deaf each with its own sign language with no known connection to any other language 10 Sign languages have also developed outside schools in communities with high incidences of deafness such as Kata Kolok in Bali and half a dozen sign languages of the hill tribes in Thailand including the Ban Khor Sign Language 11 12 These and more are all presumed isolates or small local families because many deaf communities are made up of people whose hearing parents do not use sign language and have manifestly as shown by the language itself not borrowed their sign language from other deaf communities during the recorded history of these languages 11 Reclassification editSome languages once seen as isolates may be reclassified as small families because their genetic relationship to other languages has been established This happened with Japanese and Ryukyuan languages Korean and Koreanic languages Atakapa and Akokisa languages Tol and Jicaque of El Palmar languages and the Xincan Guatemala language family in which linguists have grouped the Chiquimulilla Guazacapan Jumaytepeque and Yupiltepeque languages 1 List of language isolates by continent editBelow is a list of known language isolates arranged by continent along with notes on possible relations to other languages or language families The status column indicates the degree of endangerment of the language according to the definitions of the UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in Danger 13 Vibrant languages are those in full use by speakers of every generation with consistent native acquisition by children Vulnerable languages have a similarly wide base of native speakers but a restricted use and the long term risk of language shift Endangered languages are either acquired irregularly or spoken only by older generations Moribund languages have only a few remaining native speakers with no new acquisition highly restricted use and near universal multilingualism Extinct languages have no native speakers but are sufficiently documented to be classified as isolates Africa edit Further information Languages of Africa Unclassified languages With few exceptions all of Africa s languages have been gathered into four major phyla Afroasiatic Niger Congo Nilo Saharan and Khoisan 14 However the genetic unity of some language families like Nilo Saharan 15 16 is questionable and so there may be many more language families and isolates than currently accepted Data for several African languages like Kwisi are not sufficient for classification In addition Jalaa Shabo Laal Kujarge and a few other languages within Nilo Saharan and Afroasiatic speaking areas may turn out to be isolates upon further investigation Defaka and Ega are highly divergent languages located within Niger Congo speaking areas and may also possibly be language isolates 17 Language Speakers Status Countries CommentsBangime 2 000 Vibrant Mali Spoken in the Bandiagara Escarpment Used as an anti language 18 Hadza 1 000 Vulnerable Tanzania Spoken on the southern shore of Lake Eyasi in the southwest of Arusha Region Once listed as an outlier among the Khoisan languages 19 Language use is vigorous though there are fewer than 1 000 speakers 20 Jalaa Extinct Nigeria Strongly influenced by Dikaka but most vocabulary is very unusual 21 Laal 750 Moribund Chad Spoken in three villages along the Chari River in Moyen Chari Region Poorly known Also known as Gori Possibly a distinct branch of Niger Congo Chadic of the Afroasiatic languages or mixed citation needed Sandawe 60 000 Vibrant Tanzania Spoken in the northwest of Dodoma Region Tentatively linked to the Khoe languages 19 Shabo 400 Endangered Ethiopia Spoken in Anderaccha Gecha and Kaabo of the Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples Region Linked to the Gumuz and Koman families in the proposed Komuz branch of the Nilo Saharan languages 22 Asia edit Language Speakers Status Countries CommentsBurushaski 300 000 23 Vulnerable Pakistan Spoken in the Yasin Valley and Hunza Valley of Gilgit Baltistan Linked to Caucasian languages 24 Indo European 25 26 and Na Dene languages 27 28 in various proposals Elamite Extinct Iran Formerly spoken in Elam along the northeast coast of the Persian Gulf Attested from around 2800 BC to 300 BC 29 Some propose a relationship to the Dravidian languages see Elamo Dravidian but this is not well supported 30 Kusunda At least 1 2023 31 Moribund Nepal Spoken in Gandaki Province The recent discovery of a few speakers shows that it is not demonstrably related to anything else 32 Puroik 33 20 000 Vulnerable IndiaNihali 2 000 Endangered India Also known as Nahali Spoken in northeastern Maharashtra and southwestern Madhya Pradesh along the Tapti River Strong lexical Munda influence from Korku 34 Used as anti language by speakers 35 Nivkh 200 Moribund Russia Also known as Gilyak Spoken in the lower Amur River basin and in the northern part of Sakhalin Dialects sometimes considered two languages 36 Has been linked to Chukotko Kamchatkan languages 37 Sumerian Extinct Iraq Spoken in Mesopotamia until around 1800 BC but used as a classical language until 100 AD 38 Long extinct but well attested language of ancient Sumer Tambora Extinct Indonesia Poorly documented extinct since the 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora basic vocabulary points towards it being an isolate Oceania edit Current research considers that the Papuasphere centered in New Guinea includes as many as 37 isolates 39 The more is known about these languages in the future the more likely it is for these languages to be later assigned to a known language family To these one must add several isolates found among non Pama Nyungan languages of Australia 40 Language Speakers Status Countries CommentsAbinomn 300 Vibrant Indonesia Spoken in the far north of New Guinea Also known as Bas or Foia Language is considered safe by UNESCO but endangered by Ethnologue 41 Anem 800 Papua New Guinea Spoken on the northwest coast of New Britain 42 Perhaps related to Yeli Dnye and Ata 43 Ata 2 000 Spoken in the central highlands of New Britain Also known as Wasi Perhaps related to Yeli Dnye and Anem 44 45 Busa 370 Spoken in Sandaun Province northwestern Papua New Guinea Added to Senu River 46 Giimbiyu Extinct Australia Spoken in the northern part of Arnhem Land until the early 1980s Sometimes considered a small language family consisting of Mengerrdji Urningangk and Erre 47 Part of a proposal for the undemonstrated Arnhem Land language family Kol 4 000 Vibrant Papua New Guinea Spoken in the northeastern part of New Britain Possibly related to the poorly known Sulka or the Baining languages suggested as part of the East Papuan languages 48 49 Kuot 2 400 Vulnerable Papua New Guinea Spoken on New Ireland Also known as Panaras Suggested to form part of the East Papuan family 49 Malak Malak 10 Moribund Australia Spoken in northern Australia Often considered part of one Northern Daly family together with Tyeraity Used to be considered genetically related to the Wagaydyic languages but nowadays they are considered genetically distinct 50 Murrinh patha 1 973 Vibrant Spoken on the eastern coast of Joseph Bonaparte Gulf in the Top End The proposed linkage to Ngan gityemerri in one Southern Daly family 51 is generally accepted to be valid Mpur 5000 Vibrant Indonesia Spoken in the Mpur and Amberbaken Districts Tambrauw Regency on the north coast of the Bird s Head Peninsula Ngan gityemerri 26 Moribund Australia Spoken in the Top End along the Daly River The proposed linkage to Murrinh patha in one Southern Daly family 51 is generally accepted to be valid Pyu 250 Vibrant Papua New Guinea Spoken in Green River Rural LLG in Sandaun Province near the Indonesian border Linked to neighboring Left May and Amto Musan in a proposed Arai Samaia family 52 Sulka 2 500 3 000 Vibrant New Britain Papua New Guinea Possible language isolate spoken across the eastern end of New Britain Poorly attested Suggested to form part of the East Papuan family 49 Tayap gt 50 Moribund Papua New Guinea Formerly spoken in the village of Gapun Links to Lower Sepik languages and Torricelli languages have been explored but the general consensus among Linguists is that it is an isolate unrelated to surrounding languages 53 Tiwi 2 040 Vulnerable Australia Spoken in the Tiwi Islands in the Timor Sea Traditionally Tiwi is polysynthetic but the Tiwi spoken by younger generations is not 54 Wagiman 11 Moribund Spoken in the southern part of the Top End May be distantly related to the Yangmanic languages 55 which might in turn be a member of the Macro Gunwinyguan family 40 but neither link has been demonstrated Wardaman 50 Spoken in the southern part of the Top End The extinct and poorly attested Dagoman and Yangman dialects are sometimes treated as separate languages forming a Yangmanic family to which Wagiman may be distantly related 55 Possibly a member of the Macro Gunwinyguan family 40 but this has yet to be demonstrated Europe edit Language Speakers Status Countries CommentsBasque 751 500 2016 56 1 185 500 passive speakers Vulnerable Spain France Natively known as Euskara the Basque language is found in the historical region of the Basque Country between France and Spain It has no known living relatives although Aquitanian is commonly regarded as related to or a direct ancestor of Basque Some linguists have claimed similarities with various languages of the Caucasus 57 58 that are indicative of a relationship while others have proposed a relation to Iberian 59 and to the hypothetical Dene Caucasian languages 60 North America edit Language Speakers Status Countries CommentsAlsea Extinct United States Poorly attested Spoken along the central coast of Oregon until the early 1950s 61 Sometimes regarded as two separate languages Often included in the Penutian hypothesis in a Coast Oregon Penutian branch 62 Atakapa Spoken on the Gulf coast of eastern Texas and southwestern Louisiana until the early 1900s Often linked to Muskogean in a Gulf hypothesis 63 Chimariko Spoken in northern California until the 1950s 64 Part of the Hokan hypothesis 65 Chitimacha Well attested Spoken along the Gulf coast of southeastern Louisiana until 1940 66 Possibly in the Totozoquean family of Mesoamerica 66 Coahuilteco United States Mexico Spoken in southern Texas and northeastern Mexico until the 1700s Part of the Pakawan hypothesis 67 has been linked to the hypothesised Hokan languages in a larger group 68 Cuitlatec Mexico Spoken in northern Guerrero until the 1960s 69 Has been proposed to be part of Macro Chibchan 70 and Uto Aztecan 69 Esselen United States Poorly known Spoken in the Big Sur region of California until the early 1800s Part of the Hokan hypothesis 71 Haida 24 Moribund Canada United States Spoken in the Haida Gwaii archipelago off the northwest coast of British Columbia and the southern islands of the Alexander Archipelago in southeastern Alaska Some proposals connect it to the Na Dene languages but these have fallen into disfavor 72 Huave 20 000 Endangered Mexico Spoken in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in the southeast of Oaxaca state Has been linked to various language families but is still generally considered an isolate 73 Karuk 12 Moribund United States Spoken along the Klamath River in northwestern California Part of the Hokan hypothesis but little evidence for this 73 Keres 13 190 Endangered Spoken in several pueblos throughout New Mexico including Cochiti and Acoma Pueblos Has two main dialects Eastern and Western Sometimes those two dialects are separated into languages in a Keresan family 74 Kutenai 345 Moribund Canada United States Spoken in the Rockies of northeastern Idaho northwestern Montana and southeastern British Columbia Attempts have been made to place it in a Macro Algic or Macro Salishan family but these have not gained significant support 73 Natchez Extinct United States Spoken in southern Mississippi and eastern Louisiana until 1957 75 Often linked to Muskogean in a Gulf hypothesis 76 Attempts at revival have produced six people with some fluency 77 Purepecha 140 000 Endangered Mexico Spoken in the north of Michoacan state Language of the ancient Tarascan kingdom Sometimes regarded as two languages 73 Salinan Extinct United States Spoken along the south central coast of California Part of the Hokan hypothesis 78 Seri 720 Vulnerable Mexico Spoken along the coast of the Gulf of California in the southwest of Sonora state Part of the Hokan hypothesis 79 Siuslaw Extinct United States Spoken on the southwest coast of Oregon until 1960 Likely related to Alsea Coosan languages or possibly the Wintuan languages Part of the Penutian hypothesis 62 Takelma Spoken in western Oregon until mid 20th century 80 Part of the Penutian hypothesis 80 Timucua Well attested Spoken in northern Florida and southern Georgia until the mid to late 1700s Briefly spoken in Cuba by a migrant community established in 1763 A connection with the poorly known Tawasa language has been suggested but this may be a dialect 81 Tonkawa Spoken in central and northern Texas until the early 1940s citation needed Tunica Spoken in western Mississippi northeastern Louisiana and southeastern Arkansas until 1948 Attempts at revitalization have produced 32 second language speakers citation needed Washo 20 Moribund Spoken along the Truckee River in the Sierra Nevada of eastern California and northwestern Nevada Part of the Hokan hypothesis 82 Yana Extinct Well attested Spoken in northern California until 1916 Part of the Hokan hypothesis 83 Yuchi 4 Moribund Spoken in Oklahoma but formerly spoken in eastern Tennessee A connection to the Siouan languages has been proposed 84 Zuni 9 620 Vulnerable Spoken in Zuni Pueblo in northwestern New Mexico Links to Penutian 85 and Keres 86 have been proposed South America edit Language Speakers Status Countries CommentsAikana 200 Endangered Brazil Spoken in the Amazon of eastern Rondonia Links to Kanoe and Kwaza have been tentatively proposed 87 Arawakan has been suggested citation needed Andoque 370 Colombia Peru Spoken on the upper reaches of the Japura River Extinct in Peru Possibly Witotoan 88 Betoi Extinct Venezuela Spoken in the Apure River basin near the Colombian border until the 18th century Paezan has been suggested 88 Candoshi Shapra 1 100 Endangered Peru Spoken along the Chapuli Huitoyacu Pastaza and Morona river valleys in southwestern Loreto Has been linked to various language families but no agreement exists on its classification 89 Canichana Extinct Bolivia Spoken in the Llanos de Moxos region of Beni Department until around 2000 Connections with various language families have been proposed none widely accepted 90 Cayuvava 4 Moribund Spoken in the Amazon west of Mamore River north of Santa Ana del Yacuma in the Beni Department 91 Chimane 5 300 Vulnerable Spoken along the Beni river in Beni Department Also spelled Tsimane Sometimes split into multiple languages in a Moseten family Linked to the Chonan languages in a Moseten Chonan hypothesis 92 Chiquitano 5 900 Endangered Bolivia Brazil Spoken in the eastern part of Santa Cruz department and the southwestern part of Mato Grosso state Has been linked to the Macro Je family 93 94 Cofan 2 400 Colombia Ecuador Spoken in northern Sucumbios Province and southern Putumayo Department Also called A ingae 95 Sometimes classified as Chibchan but the similarities appear to be due to borrowings Seriously endangered in Colombia 96 Fulnio 1 000 Moribund Brazil Spoken in the states of Paraiba Pernambuco Alagoas Sergipe and the northern part of Bahia Divided into two dialects Fulnio and Yate 97 Sometimes classified as a Macro Je language 98 99 Guato 6 Spoken in the far south of Mato Grosso near the Bolivian border Has been classified as Macro Je but this is disputed 100 Itonama 5 Bolivia Spoken in the far eastern part of Beni Department A relationship to Paezan has been suggested 101 Kamentsa 4 000 Endangered Colombia Spoken in Sibundoy in the Putumayo Department Also known as Camsa Coche Sibundoy Kamentxa Kamse or Camentsea citation needed Kanoe 5 Moribund Brazil Spoken in southeastern Rondonia Also known as Kapishana Tentatively linked to Kwaza and Aikana 87 Part of a Macro Paesan proposal 102 Kunza Extinct Chile Spoken in areas near Salar de Atacama until the 1950s Also known as Atacameno Part of a Macro Paesan proposal 102 Kwaza 54 Moribund Brazil Spoken in eastern Rondonia Connections have been proposed with Aikana and Kanoe 87 Leco 20 Bolivia Spoken at the foot of the Andes in the department of La Paz 103 Mapuche 260 000 Vulnerable Chile Argentina Spoken in areas of the far southern Andes and in the Chiloe Archipelago Also known as Mapudungun Araucano or Araucanian 104 Variously part of Andean 70 Macro Panoan 102 or Mataco Guaicuru 105 proposals Sometimes Huilliche is treated as a separate language reclassifying Mapuche into an Araucanian family 106 Munichi Extinct Peru Spoken in the southern part of Loreto Region until the late 1990s Possibly evolved either from a mixed language or a sister language to Proto Arawak 107 Movima 1 400 Vulnerable Bolivia Spoken in the Llanos de Moxos in the north of Beni Department Affiliations with Canichana Chibcha and Macro Tucanoan have been proposed none of these have been proven 108 Oti Extinct Brazil Spoken in Sao Paulo until the early 1900s Macro Je has been suggested 109 Paez 60 000 Vulnerable Colombia Spoken in the northern part of Cauca Department Several proposed relationships in the Paezan hypothesis but nothing conclusive 110 Puelche Extinct Argentina Chile Spoken in the Pampas region last speaker died around 1960 111 Sometimes linked to Het as part of the Chonan languages 112 Included in a proposed Macro Jibaro family 113 Tequiraca Peru Spoken in the central part of Loreto until the 1950s Also known as Auishiri A connection with Canichana has been proposed citation needed Trumai 50 Moribund Brazil Settled on the upper Xingu River Currently reside in the Xingu National Park in the northern part of Mato Grosso 114 Urarina 3 000 Vulnerable Peru Spoken in the central part of the Loreto Region 115 Part of the Macro Jibaro proposal 116 Waorani 2 000 Ecuador Peru Also known as Sabela Spoken between the Napo and Curaray rivers Could be spoken by several groups living in isolation 117 Warao 28 000 Endangered Guyana Suriname and Venezuela Spoken in the Orinoco Delta Sometimes linked to Paezan 102 Yaghan Extinct Chile Spoken in far southern Tierra del Fuego until 2022 Also called Yamana 118 Yaruro 7 900 Vibrant Venezuela Spoken along the Orinoco Cinaruco Meta and Apure rivers Linked to the extinct Esmeralda language 119 Yuracare 2 700 Endangered Bolivia Spoken in the foothills of the Andes in Cochabamba and Beni Departments Connections to Mosetenan Pano Tacanan Arawakan and Chonan have been suggested 120 See also editUnclassified languages List of language familiesReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j Campbell Lyle 2010 08 24 Language Isolates and Their History or What s Weird Anyway Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society 36 1 16 31 doi 10 3765 bls v36i1 3900 ISSN 2377 1666 p xi Lyle Campbell 2018 Introduction Language Isolates edited by Lyle Campbell pp xi xiv Routledge Urban Matthias April 2021 The geography and development of language isolates Royal Society Open Science 8 4 rsos 202232 202232 Bibcode 2021RSOS 802232U doi 10 1098 rsos 202232 ISSN 2054 5703 PMC 8059667 PMID 33996125 Bradley John 2016 Wuka nya nganunga li Yanyuwa li Anthawirriyarra Language for us the Yanyuwa Saltwater People a Yanyuwa encyclopaedia Volume 1 Jean F Kirton Elfreda MacDonald North Melbourne Vic ISBN 978 1 925003 67 3 OCLC 957570810 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Thomason Sarah Grey 1988 Language contact creolization and genetic linguistics Terrence Kaufman Berkeley ISBN 0 520 07893 4 OCLC 16525266 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Senghas Ann Coppola Marie July 2001 Children Creating Language How Nicaraguan Sign Language Acquired a Spatial Grammar Psychological Science 12 4 323 328 doi 10 1111 1467 9280 00359 ISSN 0956 7976 PMID 11476100 S2CID 9978841 Roger D Woodard ed 2004 The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World s Ancient Languages Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56256 2 OCLC 59471649 Mallory J P 2000 The Tarim mummies ancient China and the mystery of the earliest peoples from the West with 190 illustrations 13 in color Victor H Mair New York N Y Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05101 1 OCLC 43378559 A Leitch Barbara 1979 A Concise dictionary of Indian tribes of North America Algonac MI OCLC 868981165 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link T Muzale H R 2004 Kamusi ya Lugha ya Alama ya Tanzania LAT Tanzanian Sign Language TSL dictionary Kiswahili TSL English Languages of Tanzania Project University of Dar es Salaam ISBN 9987 691 02 1 OCLC 67947374 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b de Vos Connie March 2011 Kata Kolok Color Terms and the Emergence of Lexical Signs in Rural Signing Communities The Senses and Society 6 1 68 76 doi 10 2752 174589311X12893982233795 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0012 BB5A 6 ISSN 1745 8927 S2CID 218839277 Nonaka Angela M July 2009 Estimating size scope and membership of the speech sign communities of undocumented indigenous village sign languages The Ban Khor case study Language amp Communication 29 3 210 229 doi 10 1016 j langcom 2009 02 004 UNESCO Interactive Atlas of the World s Languages in Danger unesco org UNESCO Retrieved 13 February 2021 Blench Roger 2017 African language isolates In Language Isolates edited by Lyle Campbell pp 176 206 Routledge Starostin George The Nilo Saharan hypothesis tested through lexicostatistics current state of affairs Academia Harald Hammarstrom Robert Forkel Martin Haspelmath Sebastian Bank 2020 04 16 Linguistics glottolog glottolog Glottolog database 4 2 1 doi 10 5281 zenodo 3754591 retrieved 2020 08 12 Blench Roger Niger Congo an Alternative View PDF Hantgan Abbie List Johann Mattis September 2018 Bangime Secret Language Language Isolate or Language Island a b Witzlack Makarevich Alena Nakagawa Hirosi 2019 Linguistic Features and Typologies in Languages Commonly Referred to as Khoisan In Ekkehard Wolff H ed The Cambridge Handbook of African Linguistics CUP pp 382 416 Miller Kirk Highlights of Hadza Fieldwork Academia Kleinewillinghofer Ulrich 2001 Jalaa An Almost Forgotten Language of Northeastern Nigeria A Language Isolate Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika 16 17 239 271 Ahland Colleen 2010 The Classification of Gumuz and Koman Languages Language Isolates in Africa Workshop Burushaski Script In Roman Perso Arabic Characters Okayed Dawn News 2 February 2023 Retrieved 11 February 2023 John D Bengtson jdbengt net Retrieved 19 March 2019 Hamp Eric P August 2013 The Expansion of the Indo European Languages An Indo Europeanist s Evolving View PDF Sino Platonic Papers 239 8 Retrieved 5 April 2014 Casule Ilija 2003 Evidence for the Indo European laryngeals in Burushaski and its genetic affiliation with Indo European The Journal of Indo European Studies 31 1 2 pp 21 86 John Bengtson Some features of Dene Caucasian phonology with special reference to Basque Cahiers de l Institut de Linguistique de Louvain CILL 30 4 33 54 John Bengtson and V Blazek Lexica Dene Caucasica Central Asiatic Journal 39 1995 11 50 amp 161 164 Stolper Matthew W 2008 Elamite In The Ancient Languages of Mesopotamia Egypt and Aksum p 47 50 David McAlpin Toward Proto Elamo Dravidian Language vol 50 no 1 1974 David McAlpin Elamite and Dravidian Further Evidence of Relationships Current Anthropology vol 16 no 1 1975 David McAlpin Linguistic prehistory the Dravidian situation in Madhav M Deshpande and Peter Edwin Hook Aryan and Non Aryan in India Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies University of Michigan Ann Arbor 1979 David McAlpin Proto Elamo Dravidian The Evidence and its Implications Transactions of the American Philosophical Society vol 71 pt 3 1981 The language that doesn t use no Resuscitating dying Kusunda language Kathmandupost com 2019 01 04 Retrieved 2022 09 03 Blench Roger 2011 De classifying Arunachal languages Reconsidering the evidence Archived 2013 05 26 at the Wayback Machine Nihali Endangered Languages Project Retrieved 30 January 2021 Nagaraja K S 2014 The Nihali Language Mysore Central Institute of Indian Languages p 250 ISBN 978 81 7343 144 9 Fortescue Michael 2016 Comparative Nivkh Dictionary Languages of the World Dictionaries LW D 62 Munich Lincom Europa ISBN 978 3 86288 687 6 Fortescue Michael 2011 The relationship of Nivkh to Chukotko Kamchatkan revisited Lingua 121 8 1359 1376 doi 10 1016 j lingua 2011 03 001 Joan Oates 1979 Babylon Revised Edition Thames and Hudston Ltd 1986 p 30 52 53 Palmer Bill 2017 Language families of the New Guinea Area In Bill Palmer ed The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area Berlin Boston De Gruyter pp 1 20 doi 10 1515 9783110295252 001 ISBN 978 3 11 029525 2 Retrieved 2020 08 03 a b c Evans N Introduction in Evans N ed The Non Pama Nyungan Languages of Northern Australia comparative studies of the continent s most linguistically complex region Studies in Language Change 552 Canberra Pacific Linguistics 2003 Size and vitality of Abinomn Ethnologue Retrieved 2020 08 12 Eberhard David M Simons Gary F Fennig Charles D eds 2019 Papua New Guinea languages Ethnologue Languages of the World 22nd ed Dallas SIL International Stebbins Tonya Evans Bethwyn Terrill Angela 2018 The Papuan languages of Island Melanesia In Palmer Bill ed The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area A Comprehensive Guide The World of Linguistics Vol 4 Berlin De Gruyter Mouton pp 775 894 ISBN 978 3 11 028642 7 Ross Malcolm 2001 Is there an East Papuan phylum Evidence from pronouns Pacific Linguistics ISBN 978 0 85883 445 3 retrieved 2020 08 12 Ross Malcolm 2005 Pronouns as a preliminary diagnostic for grouping Papuan languages Pacific Linguistics ISBN 978 0 85883 562 7 retrieved 2020 08 12 NewGuineaWorld Senu River Campbell R A Sketch Grammar of Urningangk Erre and Mengerrdji the Giimbiyu languages of Western Arnhem Land Honours thesis University of Melbourne 2006 Kol Endangered Language Project a b c Dunn Michael Reesnik Ger Terrill Angela 2002 The East Papuan Languages A Preliminary Typological Appraisal PDF Oceanic Linguistics 41 1 28 62 doi 10 1353 ol 2002 0019 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0013 1ADC 1 S2CID 143012930 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Nordlinger Rachel 2017 Chapter 37 The languages of the Daly region Northern 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Lakarra Joseba Trask R L Robert Lawrence 1995 Towards a history of the Basque language Amsterdam J Benjamins Pub Co p 81 ISBN 978 90 272 8567 6 OCLC 709596553 Mallory J P 1989 In search of the Indo Europeans language archaeology and myth New York N Y Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 05052 X OCLC 20394139 Orduna Aznar Eduardo 2005 Sobre algunos posibles numerales en textos ibericos Palaeohispanica 5 491 506 Bengtson John 2004 Some features of Dene Caucasian Phonology with special reference to Basque PDF Cahiers de l Institut de Linguistique de Louvain 30 4 33 54 doi 10 2143 CILL 30 4 2003307 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 28 Retrieved 20 February 2021 Buckley Eugene 1989 The Structure of the Alsea Verb Root Papers from the 1989 Hokan Penutian Workshop Ed Scott DeLancey University of Oregon Papers in Linguistics 2 17 a b Grant A P 1997 Coast Oregon Penutian Problems and Possibilities International Journal of American Linguistics 63 1 144 156 doi 10 1086 466316 S2CID 143822361 Retrieved 7 February 2021 Munro Pamela 1994 Gulf and Yuki Gulf Anthropological Linguistics 36 2 125 222 ISSN 0003 5483 JSTOR 30028292 Golla Victor 2011 Californian Indian Languages University of California Press p 89 Jany Carmen 2009 Chimariko Grammar Areal and Typographical Perspective Santa Barbara University of California Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 520 09875 6 Retrieved 7 February 2021 a b Brown Cecil Wichmann Soren Beck Dacid 2014 Chitimacha a Mesoamerican Language Spoken in the Lower Mississippi Valley International Journal of American Linguistics 80 4 426 484 doi 10 1086 677911 S2CID 145538166 Campbell Lyle 1996 Coahuiltecan A Closer Look Anthropological Linguistics 38 4 620 634 JSTOR 30013048 Langdon Margaret 2011 Comparative Hokan Coahuiltecan Studies A Survey and Appraisal De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 088783 9 Retrieved 9 February 2021 a b Escalante Hernandez Robert 1982 El Cuitlateco Mexico D F Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia a b Greenberg Joseph Ruhlen Merritt An Amerind Etymological Dictionary PDF Dept of Anthropological Sciences Stanford University p 276 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 12 25 Retrieved 9 February 2021 Leedom Shaul David 1995 The Huelel Esselen language International Journal of American Linguistics 61 5 191 239 doi 10 1086 466251 S2CID 144781879 Retrieved 10 February 2021 Levine Robert D 1979 Haida and Na Dene A new look at the evidence International Journal of American Linguistics 45 2 151 170 doi 10 1086 465587 S2CID 143503584 a b c d Campbell Lyle 1997 American Indian Languages The Historical Linguistics of Native America Oxford Oxford Studies in Anthropological Linguistics Oxford University Press Miller Wick 1963 Proto Keresan Phonology International Journal of American Linguistics 29 4 310 330 doi 10 1086 464748 S2CID 143519987 Retrieved 11 February 2021 Kimball Geoffry 2005 Natchez In Janine Scancarelli Heather Kay Hardy eds Native Languages of the Southeastern United States University of Nebraska Press pp 385 453 ISBN 978 0 8032 4235 7 Haas M R 1956 Natchez and the Muskogean languages Language 32 1 61 72 doi 10 2307 410653 JSTOR 410653 Smith Diane 2011 06 15 University helps Native Americans save languages Project aims to increase field linguists Seattle Times Newspaper Retrieved 2013 06 02 Turner Katherina 1983 Areal and Genetic linguistic affiliations of the Salinan Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics 8 2 215 247 Retrieved 12 February 2021 Marlett Stephen La situacion sociolinguistica de la lengua seri en 2006 PDF Lenguas de las Americas lengamer org Retrieved 12 February 2021 a b Kendall Daythall 1997 The Takelma Verb Towards Proto Takelma Kalapuyan International Journal of American Linguistics 63 1 1 17 doi 10 1086 466312 JSTOR 1265863 S2CID 144593968 Granberry Julian 1990 A grammatical sketch of Timucua International Journal of American Linguistics 56 1 60 101 doi 10 1086 466138 S2CID 143759206 Mithun Marianne 2001 The Languages of Native North America Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 303 ISBN 978 0 521 29875 9 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Mithun Marianne 2001 The Languages of Native North America Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 564 ISBN 978 0 521 29875 9 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Mithun Marianne 2001 The Languages of Native North America Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 571 ISBN 978 0 521 29875 9 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Goddard Ives 1996 The classification of the native languages of North America In Goddard I ed Handbook of North American Indians Languages pp 290 323 Campbell L Mithun M 2014 The Languages of Native America Historical and Comparative Assessment Austin University of Texas Press p 418 ISBN 978 0 292 76850 5 Retrieved 17 February 2021 a b c Van der Voort Hein 2005 Kwaza in a comparative perspective International Journal of American Linguistics 71 365 412 a b South America Atlas of the World s Languages London Routledge 2007 Fabre Alain Diccionario etnolinguistico y guia bibliografica de los pueblos indigenas sudamericanos CANDOSHI PDF Retrieved 19 February 2021 Crevils Mily Tomo II Amazonia Canichana Lenguas de Bolivia Centre for Language Studies Radboud University Retrieved 19 February 2021 Crevils Mily Tomo II Amazonia Cayubaba Lenguas de Bolivia Centre for Language Studies Radboud University Retrieved 19 February 2021 Sakel Jeanette Tomo I Ambito andino Moseten y Chimane Tsimane Lenguas de Bolivia Centre for Language Studies Radboud University Retrieved 19 February 2021 Galeote Jesus Tomo III Oriente Chiquitano Lenguas de Bolivia Centre for Language Studies Radboud University Retrieved 19 February 2021 Adelaar Willem 2008 Chapter 1 Relacoes externas do Macro Je O caso do chiquitano In elles de Araujo Pereira Lima S V Santos de Paula A eds Topicalizando Macro Je Nectar pp 9 28 Cofan Endangered Languages Project Retrieved 19 February 2021 Stark Louisa 1985 Chapter 3 Indigenous Languages of Lowland Ecuador History and Current Status In Manells Klein Harriet Stark Louisa eds South American Indian Languages Retrospect and Prospect University of Texas Press p 165 ISBN 978 0 292 73732 7 Retrieved 21 February 2021 Yate Endangered Languages Project Retrieved 20 February 2021 Crevils Mily 2012 Chapter III Language Endangerment in South America The Clock is Ticking In Campbell Lyle Grondona Veronica eds Classification of the Indigenous Languages of South America A Comprehensive Guide De Gruyter p 185 ISBN 978 3 11 025803 5 Retrieved 21 February 2021 Melatti Julio Cezar Aspectos culturais nao linguisticos dos povos falantes de linguas do tronco Macro Je Roteiro para discussao no IX Encontro Macro Je PDF Retrieved 20 February 2021 Campbell Lyle 2012 Chapter II Classification of the Indigenous Languages of South America In Campbell Lyle Grondona Veronica eds Classification of the Indigenous Languages of South America A Comprehensive Guide De Gruyter p 136 ISBN 978 3 11 025803 5 Retrieved 21 February 2021 Crevils Mily Tomo II Amazonia Itonama Lenguas de Bolivia Centre for Language Studies Radboud University Retrieved 19 February 2021 a b c d Kaufman Terrence 1994 The native languages of South America In Christopher Moseley and R E Asher eds Atlas of the World s Languages 59 93 London Routledge Van der Kerke Simon Tomo I Ambito andino Leco Lenguas de Bolivia Centre for Language Studies Radboud University Retrieved 19 February 2021 Zuniga Fernando 2006 Los mapuches y su lengua Santiago de Chile Centro de Estudios Publicos p 402 Viegas Barros Jose Pedro 2013 La hipotesis de parentesco Guaicuru Mataguayo estado actual de la cuestion Revista Brasileira de Linguistica Antropologica 5 2 293 333 doi 10 26512 rbla v5i2 16269 hdl 11336 28247 Retrieved 21 February 2021 Mason John Alden 1950 The Languages of South America In steward Julian ed Handbook of South American Indians Washington D C Government Printing Office Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin pp 157 317 Gibson Michael Luke 2008 El Munichi Un idioma que se extingue PDF Yarinacocha Instituto Linguistico de Verano p 19 Retrieved 21 February 2021 Haude Katharina Tomo II Amazonia Movima Lenguas de Bolivia Centre for Language Studies Radboud University Retrieved 19 February 2021 Rodrigues Aryon 1999 6 The Amazonian Languages In Dixon R M W ed The Amazonian Languages Cambridge Cambridge University Press Adelaar Willem Muysken Pieter 2004 The Languages of the Andes Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 393 397 Viegas Barros J Pedro Un nuevo analisis fonologico del Gununa Yajuch PDF ADILQ Asociacion de Investigadores en Lengua Quechua Retrieved 21 February 2021 Viegas Barros J Pedro 1992 La familia linguistica tehuelche Revista Patagonica 54 13 39 46 Kaufman Ternece 1990 Language History in South America What We Know and How to Know More In Payne Doris ed Amazonian Linguistics Studies in Lowland South American Languages University of Texas Press Angelis Wimar Linguas Indigenas no Brasil urgencia de acoes para que sobrevivam Paper presented at the round table A situacao atual das linguas indigenas brasileiras no IX ELESI Encontro sobre Leitura e Escrita em Sociedades Indigenas Porto Seguro BA 22 a 26 de outubro de 2012 Publicada em Anari Braz Bomfim amp Francisco Vanderlei F da Costa orgs Revitalizacao de lingua indigena e educacao escolar indigena inclusiva Salvador Egba 2014 p 93 117 PDF Retrieved 27 February 2021 dead link Olawsky Knut 2006 A Grammar of Urarina First ed De Gruyter p 3 ISBN 978 3 11 019020 5 Retrieved 21 January 2021 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 Colleoni Paola Proano Jose 2010 CAMINANTES DE LA SELVA JUNGLE WALKERS PDF Quito Grupo Internacional de Trabajo sobre Asuntos Indigenas IWGIA p 10 Retrieved 27 February 2021 Vega Jorge 31 May 2019 In Chile s remote south the last speaker of an ancient language fights to keep it alive Reuters Retrieved 3 June 2019 Adelaar William F H Muysken Pieter C 2004 The languages of the Andes Cambridge Language Surveys Cambridge University Press pp 156 161 ISBN 978 1 139 45112 3 Van Gijn Rik Tomo III Oriente Yurakare Lenguas de Bolivia Centre for Language Studies Radboud University Retrieved 19 February 2021 Bibliography editCampbell Lyle ed 2017 Language Isolates Routledge Campbell Lyle 1997 American Indian languages The Historical Linguistics of Native America New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509427 1 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 NE University of Nebraska Press Smithsonian Institution Updated version of the map in Goddard 1996 ISBN 0 8032 9271 6 Grimes Barbara F Ed 2000 Ethnologue Languages of the world 14th ed Dallas TX SIL International ISBN 1 55671 106 9 Online edition Ethnologue Languages of the World Mithun Marianne 1999 The languages of Native North America Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23228 7 hbk ISBN 0 521 29875 X 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 External links editEthnologue s list of language isolates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Language isolate amp oldid 1204644950, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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