.well

Submit your writing * Support our system * What'south new on our site today!

Native Languages of the Americas:
Preserving and promoting American Indian languages

Welcome to Native Languages of the Americas! We are a small non-profit organization defended to the survival of Native American languages, especially through the employ of Internet technology. Our website is not beautiful. Probably, it never will be. But this site has inner dazzler, for it is, or will exist, a compendium of online materials about more than 800 indigenous languages of the Western Hemisphere and the people that speak them.

Sponsored Links

Native Languages of the Americas Online Resources

Alphabetical master list of Native American languages, with links to specific information nearly each language and its native speakers.
Linguistic family groupings showing the relationships between Amerindian languages.
Vocabulary lists in various American Indian languages.
Native American language learning worksheets including motion picture dictionaries, parts of the body, and pronunciation guides.
List of Native American cultures featured on our site.
Geographical index of Native American tribes grouped by continent, country, and state or province.
Maps of Native American culture areas of the Western Hemisphere.
Kids Carte du jour of Native American information presented for younger readers.
List of Native American books and other resources by and well-nigh American Indians.
Online collection of Native American myths and legends from several tribes.
Links to general American Indian linguistic communication resource available online.


NOTE: Some of the links we provide are more than useful than others. We are not responsible for the content of any of the external sites we link to. We have tried to provide the most complete directory of Native American Indian language materials available. If a link is expressionless, or you have i to add together, or if in that location is a mistake on our site you would similar to correct, information you would like us to add, or admiration you wish to limited, here is our contact page, also with answers to frequently asked questions. If you are looking for Orrin'southward homepage, we moved it from here to requite more than prominence to the Native American language pages.

Why aren't there any links almost how American Indian languages are descended from Aboriginal Egyptian? See our new page explaining the truth behind some of the wrong "theories" floating around the web most Native American languages, cultures, and history.

Feel free to link to this site or to any of the pages in it. Also, you lot have our permission to cite this information or pass it on to others in whatever fashion that would exist useful. Our goal is to brand information technology easier to acquire about, preserve, and revive Native American languages by using the Internet. This is a public service on our part. All the information about American Indians and American Indian languages was written by Orrin Lewis, Laura Redish, or our friend Nancy Sherman, who has kindly agreed to allow us use them. We make every possible endeavour to honor whatever request from Indian tribes and nations regarding the information we have provided about them, and we will mind carefully to requests from other people likewise.

Thanks for your interest in Native American languages.

Laura Redish, Manager
Orrin Lewis, Tribal Coordinator

Native American Language Families

Actually, Native American languages exercise not belong to a single Amerindian family, just 25-thirty pocket-sized ones; they are usually discussed together because of the small-scale numbers of natives speaking most of these languages and how little is known about many of them. At that place are around 25 million native speakers of the more than 800 surviving Amerind languages. The vast majority of these speakers live in Central and South America, where language utilize is vigorous. In Canada and the U.s.a., only about half a million native speakers of an Amerind tongue remain.

Click on a linguistic communication family to see a linguistic tree of that family and links most the group. Click on a language name to see a clarification and links well-nigh that language, as well as data about the American Indian people who speak it.

Algonquian Languages (Algic, Algonkian)
Abenaki-Penobscot, Algonquin, Arapaho, Atikamekw (Tête-de-Boule), Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Cree, Etchemin, Gros Ventre-Atsina, Kickapoo, Lenape Delaware, Loup A/B, Lumbee (Croatan, Pamlico), Mahican (Mohican), Maliseet-Passamaquoddy, Menomini, Mesquakie-Sauk (Sac and Fox), Miami-Illinois, Michif (Métis), Mi'kmaq (Micmac), Mohegan-Pequot), Montagnais Innu, Munsee Delaware, Nanticoke, Narragansett, Naskapi Innu, Ojibwe (Chippewa, Ottawa), Potawatomi, Powhatan, Shawnee, Wampanoag, Wiyot, Yurok; possibly Beothuk (Blood-red Indian)
Arawakan Languages
Arawak, Ashaninka, Garifuna, Taino, Timucua
Athabaskan Languages (Na-Dene)
Ahtna, Apache, Beaver, Carrier, Chilcotin, Chipewyan, Gwichin, Haida, Hupa, Kaska, Navajo, Slavey, Tlingit
Caddoan Languages
Arikara, Caddo, Pawnee
Cariban Languages
Arara, Carib, Macushi
Chibchan Languages
Arhuaco (Ika), Bribri, Cofan, Chibcha, Cuna (Kuna)
Eskimo-Aleut Languages
Aleut, Alutiiq, Inuktitut
Gulf Languages
Atakapa, Chitimacha, Natchez
Hokan Languages
Chimariko, Chumash, Havasupai, Karuk, Kashaya, Mohave, Pomo, Yuma-Quechan
Iroquoian Languages
Cayuga, Cherokee (Tsalagi), Huron-Wyandot, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Seneca, Susquehannock, Tuscarora
Kiowa-Tanoan Languages
Kiowa, Tewa, Tiwa, Towa
Macro-Ge Languages
Bororo, Xavante
Mayan Languages
Acatec, Achi, Ch'ol, Itza, Yucatec Maya
Muskogean Languages
Alabama, Apalachee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Coushatta, Miccosukee, Muscogee
Oto-Manguean Languages
Amuzgo, Zapotec
Panoan
Capanahua, Mayoruna
Penutian Languages
Alsea, Cathlamet, Chinook, Chinook Jargon, Coos, Klamath, Maidu, Miwok, Nez Perce, Nisgaa, Ohlone, Tsimshian, Wintu, Yakama, Yokuts
Salishan Languages
Bella Coola, Chehalis, Coeur d'Alene, Cowichan, Cowlitz, Flathead Salish, Lillooet, Quinault, Saanich, Skagit-Snohomish, Squamish
Siouan Languages
Assiniboine, Biloxi, Catawba, Crow, Dakota-Lakota, Hidatsa, Hochunk, Kansa, Mandan, Omaha-Ponca, Osage, Otoe, Quapaw
Tucanoan Languages
Orejon
Tupian Languages
Guarani
Uto-Aztecan Languages
Cahuilla, Chemehuevi, Cocopah, Comanche, Diegueno, Gabrielino-Tongva, Hopi, Huichol, Juaneno, Luiseno, Nahuatl (Aztec), Paiute, Papago-Pima, Shoshone, Tarahumara, Ute, Yaqui
Wakashan Languages
Bella Bella, Haisla, Kwakiutl, Makah, Nootka
Other North American Indian Languages
Cayuse, Keres, Kootenay, Plains Indian Sign Language, Tonkawa, Yuchi, Zuni
Other Central American Indian Languages
Mixe-Zoque, Misumalpan, Totonacan
Other S American Indian Languages
Alacalufan, Arawan, Arutani-Sape, Aymara, Barbacoan, Cahuapanan, Chapacuran, Chocoan, Chon, Guaicuruan, Guahiboan, Harakmbet, Katukinan, Jivaroan, Lule-Vilelan, Makú, Mascoian, Matacoan, Mura, Nambiquaran, Quechua, Saliban, Uru-Chipayan, Witotoan, Yaguan, Yanomam, Zamucoan, Zaparoan

Sponsored Links

Recommended Books about Native American Languages
(Affiliate links courtesy of Amazon.com)

The Languages of Native Due north America: * The Amazonian Languages:
The Languages of the Andes: * The Mesoamerican Indian Languages:
     Comprehensive Native American linguistic references from the Cambridge Language Surveys.
American Indian Languages: Cultural and Social Contexts:
     A good introduction to the diversity of indigenous languages of North, Fundamental, and South America.
O Brave New Words!:
     Interesting book about English loanwords that come from Native American languages.
Native American Placenames of the The states:
     Well-researched encyclopedia of American place names and their Indian language etymologies.
Native American Language Ideologies: Beliefs, Practices, and Struggles in Indian Country:
     Collection of essays on Native American language communities, sociolinguistics, and tribal language preservation today.
Telling Stories in the Confront of Danger: Linguistic communication Renewal in Native American Communities:
     Book almost Native American linguistic communication revival, storytelling, and cultural tradition.
Syntax and Semantics: Native American Languages:
     Linguistic text surveying the grammer of Amerindian languages.
Built-in in the Blood: On Native American Translation:
     Fascinating book virtually the complications and perils of Native American language translations.
Flutes of Burn down: Essays on California Indian Languages:
     First-class collection of materials well-nigh Native American language loss, history, and revitalization in California.
Crossing Mountains: Native American Language Teaching in Public Schools:
     An in-depth look at Native American language preservation and usage in Montana.
Native Languages of the Southeastern U.s.a.:
     Survey of Southeast Native American linguistics.
Native American Language Dictionaries:
     A list of lexicon, grammar, and language learning books in private Native American languages.

Selected Links about Native American Languages

ariasliveres.blogspot.com

Source: http://www.native-languages.org/

0 Response to ".well"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel