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Endangered language

An endangered language is a language with so few surviving speakers that it is in danger of falling out of use. For example, many Native American languages in the United States became extinct through policies in the 19th and early 20th centuries discouraging and/or outlawing their use (linguicide). A dead language (or extinct language) is one which has no native speakers.

Contents

Identifying endangered languages

While there is no definite threshold for identifying a language as endangered, three main criteria are used as guidelines:

  1. The number of speakers currently living.
  2. The mean age of native and/or fluent speakers.
  3. The percentage of the youngest generation acquiring fluency with the language in question.

For example, Ainu is endangered in Japan, with only approximately 300 surviving native speakers, only 15 of which use the language actively, and few youth acquiring fluency in it. A language might also be declared as endangered if it has 100 speakers, but the speakers are all over the age of 90, and no youth are learning the language.

Some languages, such as those in Indonesia may have tens of thousands of speakers but be endangered because children are no longer learning them, or speakers are in the process of shifting to using the national language Indonesian (or a local Malay variety) in place of local languages.

In contrast, a language with only 100 speakers might be considered very much alive if it is the primary language of a community, and is the first (or only) language of all children in that community.

Examples of endangered languages

Main article: list of endangered languages

Examples of recently extinct languages

Main article: list of extinct languages

With last known speaker and date of death:

  1. Alsea, John Albert (1942)
  2. Beothuk, Shanawdithit (white person name: "Nancy April") (1829)
  3. Cayuse, (1930s)
  4. Central Kalapuyan (a Kalapuyan language), except for the Santiam dialect, last speakers were about 6 persons who were all over 60 (1937)
  5. entire Chumashan family (including Obispeņo, Purisimeņo, Ineseņo, Barbareņo, Ventureņo, and Island Chumash), Mary Yee (speaker of Barbareņo) (1965)
  6. all dialects of Upper Chinook (a Chinookan language), except for Wasco-Wishram dialect. Clackamas dialect (1930s), other dialects have little documentation.
  7. Hanis (a Coosan language), Martha Johnson (1972)
  8. Kakadu (Gagadju) , Big Bill Neidjie (July 2002)
  9. Kathlamet (a Chinookan language), (1930s)
  10. Lower Chinook (a Chinookan language), (1930s)
  11. Mahican, last spoken in Wisconsin in 1930s
  12. Mohegan, Fidelia Fielding (1908)
  13. Manx, Ned Maddrell (December 1974) (but is being revived as a second language)
  14. Miluk (a Coosan language), Annie Miner Peterson (1939)
  15. Santiam (dialect of Central Kalapuyan, a Kalapuyan language), (1950s)
  16. Siuslaw, (1970s)
  17. Tasmanian , (late 19th century)
  18. Tualatin (dialect of Northern Kalapuyan, a Kalapuyan language), Louis Kenoyer (1937)
  19. Ubykh, Tevfik Esenc (October 1992)
  20. Vegliot Dalmatian, Tuone Udaina (Italian: Antonio Udina) (10 June 1898)
  21. Yamhill (dialect of Northern Kalapuyan, a Kalapuyan language), Louisa Selky (1915)
  22. Yaquina, (1884)
  23. Yonkalla (a Kalapuyan language), last recorded from Laura Blackery Albertson who only partly remembered it (1937)

See also

External links

Bibliography

  • Hale, Ken; Krauss, Michael; Watahomigie, Lucille J.; Yamamoto, Akira Y.; Craig, Colette; Jeanne, LaVerne M. et al. (1992). Endangered languages. Language, 68 (1), 1-42.
  • Skutnabb-Kangas, Tove. (2000). Linguistic genocide in education or worldwide diversity and human rights? Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. ISBN 0-8058-3468-0.

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