siouan speakers - EAS
Na-Dene languages - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Na-Dene_languagesNa-Dene (/ ˌ n ɑː d ɪ ˈ n eɪ /; also Nadene, Na-Dené, Athabaskan–Eyak–Tlingit, Tlina–Dene) is a family of Native American languages that includes at least the Athabaskan languages, Eyak, and Tlingit languages. Haida was formerly included, but is now considered doubtful. By far the most widely spoken Na-Dene language today is Navajo.. In February 2008, a proposal connecting …
Assiniboine - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AssiniboineAssiniboine is a Mississippi Valley Siouan language, in the Western Siouan language family. In the early 21st century, about 150 people speak the language and most are more than 40 years old. The majority of the Assiniboine today speak only American English. The 2000 census showed 3,946 tribal members who lived in the United States.
List of state and territory name etymologies of the United States
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_state_and...The fifty U.S. states, the District of Columbia, the five inhabited U.S. territories, and the U.S. Minor Outlying Islands have taken their names from a wide variety of languages. The names of 24 states derive from indigenous languages of the Americas and one from Hawaiian: eight come from Algonquian languages, seven from Siouan languages (one of those by way of Miami-Illinois, …
Languages of North America - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_North_AmericaThe Siouan–Catawban languages, including Crow and Sioux, ... Alaskan Natives and is known for its archaic Russian vocabulary and indigenous influences, though the vast majority of speakers are elderly, so that this unique Russian dialect is heavily endangered. ...
List of language families - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_language_familiesIn the following, each bullet item is a known or suspected language family. Phyla with historically wide geographical distributions but comparatively few current-day speakers include Eskimo–Aleut, Na-Dené, Algic, Quechuan and Nilo-Saharan.. The geographic headings over them are meant solely as a tool for grouping families into collections, more comprehensible …
Endangered Languages Project - Sioux
https://www.endangeredlanguages.com/lang/6512Siouan, Mississippi Valley Siouan, Dakota. LANGUAGE CODE: dak, lkt, sto. VARIANTS & DIALECTS: Santee-Sisseton (Dakota) ... 170,000 (2016 Lakota Language Consortium). Includes all ethnic Sioux. Canada: 190 (2016 W. Meya). 2300 L1 speakers of all Sioux dialects in a total population of 175,000, of which 5,000 reside in Canada (2016 Lakota ...
Turkic languages - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkic_languagesTurkic languages also show some Chinese loanwords that point to early contact during the time of Proto-Turkic.. Robbeets (et al. 2015 and et al. 2017) suggest that the homeland of the Turkic languages was somewhere in Manchuria, close to the Mongolic, Tungusic and Koreanic homeland (including the ancestor of Japonic), and that these languages share a common …
Uto-Aztecan languages - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uto-Aztecan_languagesUto-Aztecan, Uto-Aztekan / ˈ juː t oʊ. æ z ˈ t ɛ k ən / or (rarely in English) Uto-Nahuatl is a family of indigenous languages of the Americas, consisting of over thirty languages.Uto-Aztecan languages are found almost entirely in the Western United States and Mexico.The name of the language family was created to show that it includes both the Ute language of Utah and the …
Mayan languages - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayan_languagesMayan languages are the descendants of a proto-language called Proto-Mayan or, in Kʼicheʼ Maya, Nabʼee Mayaʼ Tzij ("the old Maya Language"). The Proto-Mayan language is believed to have been spoken in the Cuchumatanes highlands of central Guatemala in an area corresponding roughly to where Qʼanjobalan is spoken today. The earliest proposal which identified the …
Saanich dialect - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saanich_dialectSaanich (also Sənčáθən, written as SENĆOŦEN in Saanich orthography and pronounced [sənˈt͡ʃɑs̪ən]) is the language of the First Nations Saanich people in the Pacific Northwest region of northwestern North America. Saanich is a Coast Salishan language in the Northern Straits dialect continuum, the varieties of which are closely related to the Klallam language

