List of endangered languages
Categories: Endangered languages | Lists of languages
A list of endangered languages (with fewer than 1000 speakers or in rapid decline).
In order to judge if a language is endangered, the number of speakers is less important than the age distribution; there may be 500,000 speakers of the Breton over 50 years of age, but fewer than 2,000 under 25 years of age - it is likely Breton will die out in the next half-century. There are languages in Indonesia reported to be in a similar situation with as many as two million native speakers alive now, but all of advancing age, with practically no transmission to the young. On the other hand, while there are 30,000 Ladin speakers left, almost all children still learn it as their mother tongue, thus Ladin is not endangered in the 21st century. Similarly, Hawaiian has only about 1,000 speakers but it has stabilized at this number, and now has school instruction in the language from kindergarten through college.
While there are somewhere around six or seven thousand languages on Earth today, about half of them have fewer than about 3,000 speakers, and experts predict that even in a good scenario, about half of today's languages will go extinct within the next fifty to one hundred years. Accordingly, the list below presents only a sample of the approximately 3,000 currently endangered languages.
Contents |
Africa
- Anfillo language
- Bete language
- Bikya language
- Bom language
- Bullom So language
- Bung language, 3 speakers
- Bussa language
- Dahalo language
- Defaka language
- Deti language
- Jalaa language
- Karon language
- Korana language
- Laal language
- Lufu language
- Nkoroo language
- Okiek language (also Akie, Kinare Okiek)
- Ongamo language (or Ngasa)
- Sherbro language
- Terik language
- Xiri language
Americas
- Brazil
- Amanayé. Ethnic population: 60.
- Anambé. 7 speakers in 1991.
- Apiacá. 2 speakers in 1986.
- Arikapú. 6 speakers in 1998.
- Aruá. 12 speakers in 1990.
- Arutani. 17 speakers in Brazil in 1986.
- Aurá. 2 speakers in 2004 SIL).
- Cafundo Creole. 40 speakers in 1978.
- Guató. 40 speakers in 1993.
- Himarimã. 40 speakers.
- Jabutí. 5 speakers in 1990.
- Jumá. 4 speakers in 1998. There were 300 in 1940.
- Karahawyana. 40 speakers in 1995.
- Karipuná. 12 to 15 speakers in 2000.
- Katawixi. 10 speakers in 1986.
- Katukína. 1 speaker in 1976. Ethnic population: 360.
- Kreye. 30 speakers in 1995.
- Mapidian. 50 in speakers in Brazil in 1986.
- Matipuhy. 40 speakers in 1995.
- Mondé. 30 speakers in 1995.
- Ofayé. 15 speakers in 2002.
- Omagua. There may be none left in Brazil since 1995.
- Oro Win. 5 speakers in 1996.
- Puruborá. 2 speakers in 2002.
- Sikiana. 33 speakers in Brazil in 1986.
- Tariano. 100 speakers in Brazil in 1996.
- Torá. 40 speakers in 1990.
- Tremembé.
- Xetá. 3 speakers in 1990.
- Xipaya. 2 speakers in 2000.
- Canada
- Abenaki. 20 speakers in 1991.
- Beaver, 300 speakers in 1991.
- Bella Coola. 20 speakers in 2002.
- Cayuga, 40 to 60 speakers in 2002.
- Chinook Wawa. 83 speakers in Canada in 1962.
- Haida, Northern and Southern dialects, fewer than 40 speakers in Canada in 1995.
- Haisla. 25 speakers in 1991.
- Han. 7 or 8 speakers in Canada in 1997.
- Kutenai. 6 speakers in Canada in 2002.
- Michif.About 600 speakers in 1998.
- Munsee. 7 or 8 speakers in 1991.
- Oneida, fewer than 250 speakers in 1991.
- Onondaga. 50 to 100 speakers in 1991.
- Potawatomi, 100 speakers
- Straits Salish. 20 speakers in Canada in 2002.
- Sechelt. 40 speakers in 1990.
- Sekani. 30 to 40 speakers in 1997.
- Seneca. 25 speakers in 1991.
- Squamish. 15 speakers in 2002.
- Tagish. 2 speakers in 1995.
- Tahltan. 35 speakers in 2002.
- Tsuu T'ina or Sarsi. 50 speakers in 1991.
- Tuscarora. 7 or 8 speakers in Canada in 1991.
- Colombia
- Cabiyarí. 50 speakers in 1976.
- Tariano. Ethnic population: 332 in Colombia in 1998.
- Tinigua. 2 speakers in 2000).
- Totoro. 4 speakers in 1998.
- Tunebo Angosturas. 50 speakers.
- Costa Rica
- Boruca. 5 women speakers in 1986. 30 to 35 nonfluent speakers.
- Berbice Creole Dutch. 4 or 5 speakers in 1993.
- Mapidian.
- Mawayana. 50 speakers in 1986.
- Mexico
- Chiapanec. 17 speakers in 1990.
- Kiliwa. 24 to 32 speakers in 1994.
- Matlatzinca, Atzingo. 50 to 100 speakers in 1993.
- San Francisco Matlatzinca language1Matlatzinca, San Francisco.
- Opata. 15 speakers in 1993.
- Zapotec, Asunción Mixtepec. 100 speakers in 1990.
- Zapotec, San Agustín Mixtepec. 59 speakers in 1994.
- Zoque, Tabasco. 40 speakers in 1971.
- Panama
- San Miguel Creole French. 3 speakers in 1999.
- Peru
- Cahuarano. 5 speakers in 1976.
- Chamicuro. 2 speakers in 2000.
- Iñapari. 4 speakers in 1999.
- Iquito. 35 speakers in 2002.
- Isconahua. 82 speakers in 2000.
- Jebero.
- Mascho Piro. 20 to 100 speakers in 1976.
- Muniche. 3 speakers in 1988.
- Omagua. 10 to 100 speakers in 1976.
- Resígaro. 14 speakers in 1976.
- Taushiro. 1 speaker in 2002.
- United States
- Achumawi. 10 nonfluent speakers in 1997.
- Ahtena. 80 speakers in 1995.
- Kiowa Apache. 18 speakers in 1990.
- Lipan Apache. 2 or 3 speakers in 1981.
- Arikara. 20 speakers in 1997.
- Atsugewi. 3 speakers in 1994.
- Caddo. 25 speakers in 1997.
- Cahuilla. 7 to 20 speakers in 1994.
- Chetco. 5 speakers in 1962.
- Chinook. 12 speakers of Kiksht dialect in 1996.
- Chinook Wawa. 17 speakers in the USA in 1990.
- Clallam. 10 speakers in 1997.
- Coeur d'Alene. 5 speakers in 1999.
- Coos. 1 or 2 speakers in 1962.
- Degexit'an. 20 to 30 speakers in 1997.
- Eyak. 1 speaker in 1996.
- Gros Ventre. 10 speakers in 1977.
- Northern Haida. 15 speakers in the USA in 1995.
- Han. 7 or 8 speakers in Alaska in 1995.
- Holikachuk. 12 speakers in 1995.
- Hupa. 8 speakers in 1998.
- Kalapuya. 1 or 2 speakers in 1962.
- Kansa. 19 speakers in 1990.
- Karok. 10 speakers in 1997.
- Kashaya. 45 speakers in 1994.
- Kawaiisu. 8 to 10 speakers in 2000.
- Klamath-Modoc. 1 speaker in 1998.
- Upper Kuskokwim. 40 speakers in 1995.
- Kutenai. 6 speakers in the USA in 2002.
- Luiseño. 30 to 40 speakers in 2000.
- Lushootseed. 60 speakers in 1990.
- Northeastern Maidu. 1 to 2 speakers in 1994.
- Northwestern Maidu. 3 to 6 speakers in 1994.
- Mandan. 6 speakers in 1992.
- Menominee. 39 speakers.
- Central Sierra Miwok. 12 speakers in 1994.
- Lake Miwok. 1 to 2 speakers in 1994.
- Northern Sierra Miwok. 6 speakers in 1994.
- Plains Miwok. 1 speaker in 1962.
- Southern Sierra Miwok. 7 speakers in 1994.
- Mono. 37 to 41 speakers in 1994.
- Nisenan. 1 speaker in 1994.
- Osage. 5 speakers in 1991.
- Panamint. 20 speakers.
- Pawnee. 20 speakers in 1997.
- Central Pomo. 2 to 5 speakers in 1997.
- Southeastern Pomo. 5 speakers in 1994.
- Southern Pomo. 1 speaker in 1994.
- Potawatomi. 50 speakers in 1995.
- Quapaw. 34 speakers in 1990.
- Quileute. 10 speakers in 1977.
- Straits Salish.
- Seneca. 150 speakers in 1998.
- Serrano. 1 speaker in 1994.
- Snohomish. 10 speakers in 1998.
- Tanacross. 35 speakers in 1997.
- Tanaina. 75 speakers in 1997.
- Lower Tanana. 30 speakers in 1995.
- Tolowa. 4 to 5 speakers in 1994 Hinton.
- Tübatulabal. 6 speakers.
- Tuscarora. 4 to 5 speakers in the USA in 1997.
- Tututni. 10 speakers in 1962.
- Wasco-Wishram. 69 speakers in 1990.
- Washo. 10 speakers in 1998.
- Wichita. 3 speakers in 2000.
- Wintu. 5 or 6 speakers in 1997.
- Yokuts. 78 speakers of Northern Foothill Yokuts in 1990.
- Yuchi. 10 to 12 speakers in 1997.
- Yurok. 12 speakers in 2002.
- Venezuela
Asia
- Ainu, Northern Japan, 1,000 speakers
- Aramaic, Lebanon, Kurdistan
- Chukchi, North-Eastern Siberia, circa 10,400 speakers (2001)
- Chulym, Russia, approx. 100 fluent speakers
- Manchu, northeast China, less than 100 speakers
- Northern indigenous peoples of Russia
- Macaista Chapado (also called Patuá in Macau)
- Papia Kristang (Portuguese creole spoken in Malacca, Malaysia)
- Udmurt, Udmurtia, Russia
- Mehri, Yemen and Oman
- Hobyōt, Yemen and Oman
- Jibbāli, Oman
- Baţħari, Oman
- Ħarsūsi, Oman
- Soqoţri, Socoţra island, Yemen
Australasia
- most Australian Aboriginal languages
- Yanyuwa, four speakers
- Maori
- Auslan - Australian Sign Language
Europe
- European Union
- Curonian (Germany), only 8 speakers in 2004
- Alsatian (France) rapidly in decline
- Aragonese (Spain) rapidly in decline
- Aromanian (Greece and the Balkans) rapidly in decline
- Arvanitika (Greece) rapidly declining, very few elder speakers
- Breton (France) rapidly in decline
- Cornish (United Kingdom) virtually extinct, attempts at revival
- Corsican (France) rapid decline
- Griko (south Italian Greek) (Italy) very fast decline
- Irish (Republic of Ireland) signs of revival
- Italkian (Judeo-Italian) (Italy) probably extinct
- Kashubian (Pomeranian) (Poland) rapidly declining
- Karaim
- Leonese (Spain) rapidly in decline
- Livonian (Estonia and Latvia), approx. 35 speakers
- Manx (Isle of Man) virtually extinct, attempts at revival
- Molise Slavic (Italy) rapidly in decline
- North Frisian (Germany), in decline
- Occitan (France) in decline
- Sami languages, (Scandinavia), some having fewer than 100 speakers
- Samogitian language, (Lithuania), rapidly in decline
- Scottish Gaelic (United Kingdom) in decline
- Seeltersk (Germany) most speakers eldery, signs of revival
- Tsakonian (Greece), only 300 speakers
- Lower Sorbian, (Germany) very fast decline
- Upper Sorbian, (Germany) in decline
- Wymysojer (Poland), less than 100 speakers
- Outside of the European Union
- Belarusian, very low usage in Belarus
- Istro-romanian, Istria Croatia, 500 speakers
- Krimchak (Judeo-Crimean Tatar)
- Mordvin (Russia), steady decline
- Votian, Russia, 50 speakers
See also
- Endangered language
- List of extinct languages
- List of revived languages
- Language families and languages
- Language policy
- The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire