List of last known speakers of languages
Appearance
Any language is determined to be an extinct language when the last native or fluent speaker of that language dies.
There are some 500 languages out of a total of 6,000 being classified as nearly extinct because "only a few elderly speakers are still living".[1]
Last known speakers of languages
Name | Born | Died | Language | Taxonomy | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chesten Marchant | unknown | 1676 | Cornish (last monoglot speaker) | Indo-European – Celtic – Insular Celtic – Brittonic | [notes 1] |
Margaret McMurray | unknown | 1760 | Galwegian dialect, Scottish Gaelic | Indo-European – Celtic – Insular Celtic – Goidelic – Scottish Gaelic | |
Dolly Pentreath | unknown | 1777 | Cornish (traditionally known as the last fluent native speaker; disputed)[2] |
Indo-European – Celtic – Insular Celtic – Brittonic | [notes 2] |
Shanawdithit | 1801 | c.1829 | Beothuk | unclassified | |
Walter Sutherland | unknown | c. 1850 | Norn | Indo-European – Germanic – North Germanic – West Scandinavian | |
Juana Maria | unknown | 1853 | Nicoleño | Uto-Aztecan – Northern – Takic (unclassified beyond the Takic family) | |
Nikonha | c. 1765 | 1871 | Tutelo | Siouan – Western Siouan – Ohio Valley Siouan – Virginia Siouan | [notes 3] |
Trugernanner | c. 1812 | 1876 | an unidentified Tasmanian language | unknown; there were multiple language families in Tasmania | [notes 4] |
John Davey | 1812 | 1891 | Cornish (some knowledge) | Indo-European – Celtic – Insular Celtic – Brittonic | [notes 5] |
Tuone Udaina | 1823 | 1898 | Dalmatian | Indo-European – Italic – Romance – Italo-Dalmatian | |
Fanny Cochrane Smith | 1834 | 1905 | an unidentified Tasmanian language | unknown; there were multiple language families in Tasmania | [notes 6] |
Fidelia Fielding | 1827 | 1908 | Mohegan-Pequot | Algic – Algonquian – Eastern Algonquian | |
Santu Toney | 1835 | c. 1910 | Beothuk (some knowledge) | unclassified | [notes 7] |
John Mann | 1834 | c. 1914 | Cornish (extent of proficiency unclear) | Indo-European – Celtic – Insular Celtic – Brittonic | [notes 8] |
Ishi | c. 1860 | 1916 | Yana | language isolate | [notes 9] |
Sally Noble | unknown | 1922 | Chimariko | language isolate | |
Ascencion Solorsano | unknown | 1930 | Mutsun | Yok-Utian – Utian – Ohlone/Costanoan – Southern | [5] |
Frances Johnson | unknown | 1934 | Takelma | language isolate | |
Watt Sam and Nancy Raven | unknown | late 1930s | Natchez | language isolate | |
Isabel Meadows | 1846 | 1939 | Rumsen | Yok-Utian – Utian – Ohlone/Costanoan – Southern | |
Sesostrie Youchigant | unknown | 1940s | Tunica | language isolate | |
James Nalig | c. 1870s | 1954 | Utaha | Austronesian – Malayo-Polynesian – Southern Oceanic – Oceanic | [6] |
Mary Yee | 1897 | 1965 | Barbareño | Chumashan – Southern – Central | [notes 10] |
Ned Maddrell | 1877 | 1974 | Manx | Indo-European – Celtic – Insular Celtic – Goidelic | [notes 11] |
Armand Lunel | 1892 | 1977 | Shuadit (Jewish dialect of Occitan) | Indo-European – Italic – Romance – Western – Ibero-Romance – Occitan | |
Alf Palmer | c. 1891 | 1981 | Warrungu | Pama-Nyungan – Maric | |
Jack Butler | 1901 | 1986 | Jiwarli dialect, Mantharta | Pama-Nyungan – Kanyara–Mantharta – Mantharta | |
Roscinda Nolasquez | 1892 | 1987 | Cupeño | Uto-Aztecan – Northern – Takic – Cupan – Cahuilla-Cupeño | |
Klavdiya Plotnikova | c. 1895 | 1989 | Kamassian | Uralic – Samoyedic – Core Samoyedic – Kamas–Selkup | |
Morndi Munro | unknown | 1990s | Unggumi dialect, Worrorra | Worrorran – Western – Worrorra | |
Fidela Bernat | 1898 | 1991 | Roncalese (Erronkarriko) dialect, Basque | Basque is a language isolate | |
Tevfik Esenç | 1904 | 1992 | Ubykh | Northwest Caucasian | |
Take Asai | c. 1901 | 1994 | Sakhalin Ainu | Ainu | |
Algy Paterson | unknown | 1995 | Martuthunira | Pama-Nyungan – Ngayarta | |
Truman Washington Dailey | 1898 | 1996 | Otoe-Missouria dialect, Chiwere | Siouan – Western Siouan – Mississippi Valley – Chiwere–Winnebago – Chiwere | |
Vyie | unknown | 1997 | Sirenik Eskimo | Eskimo-Aleut – Eskimo – Yupik? | |
Carmel Charles | 1912 | 1999 | Nyulnyul | Nyulnyulan – Western | |
Big Bill Neidjie | c. 1920 | 2002 | Gaagudju | Arnhem | |
Marie Smith Jones | 1918 | 2008 | Eyak | Na-Dené – Athabascan-Eyak | |
Ms. Boro | unknown | 2009 | Aka-Kora | Great Andamanese – Northern | |
William Rozario | unknown | 2010 | Cochin Indo-Portuguese creole | Portuguese Creole – Indo-Portuguese Creoles | |
Pan Jin-yu | 1914 | 2010 | Pazeh | Austronesian – Northwest Formosan | |
Boa Sr. | c. 1925 | 2010 | Aka-Bo | Great Andamanese – Northern | |
Bobby Hogg | 1920 | 2012 | Cromarty fisher dialect, Scots | Indo-European – Germanic – West Germanic – Anglo-Frisian – Anglic | |
Grizelda Kristiņa | 1910 | 2013 | Livonian | Uralic – Finnic | [notes 12] |
Hazel Sampson | 1911 | 2014 | Klallam | North Straits Salishan Languages – Salishan Languages | [notes 13] |
Doris McLemore | 1927 | living | Wichita | Caddoan – Northern | [7] |
Cristina Calderón | May 24, 1928 | living | Yaghan | language isolate | |
Edwin Benson | 1931 | living | Mandan | Siouan – Western Siouan | |
Charlie Mungulda | unknown | living | Amurdag | Iwaidjan | [8] |
John Steckley | unknown | living | Wyandot | Iroquoian – Northern – Lake Iroquoian – Five Nations – Huronian | [notes 14] |
Verdena Parker | unknown | living | Hupa | Na-Dené – Athabaskan-Eyak – Athabaskan – Pacific Coast Athabaskan | [9][10][notes 15] |
Gyani Maiyi Sen | c. 1937 | living | Kusunda | language isolate | [11] [notes 16] |
See also
- Language death
- Extinct language
- Lists of endangered languages
- List of languages by time of extinction
Notes
- ^ Believed to have been the last monoglot Cornish speaker, as opposed to other speakers such as Dolly Pentreath who could also speak English. See Last speaker of the Cornish language.
- ^ Possibly the last fluent native speaker of the Cornish language, was monoglot until her twenties. See Last speaker of the Cornish language.
- ^ Last full-blooded speaker, though partial knowledge of this language continued among mixed Cayuga-Tutelo descendants for some time.
- ^ Considered to be the last full-blood speaker of a Tasmanian language;[3] however, Fanny Cochrane Smith, who spoke one of the Tasmanian languages, outlived her.
- ^ A Cornish farmer who was one of the last people with some traditional knowledge of the Cornish language.[4] See Last speaker of the Cornish language.
- ^ Considered to be the last fluent speaker of a Tasmanian language.
- ^ Recorded a song in Beothuk in 1910.
- ^ The last attested native Cornish language speaker, part of a group of children who conversed in Cornish, interviewed in 1914 at the age of 80.[2] See Last speaker of the Cornish language.
- ^ Last member of the Yahi, the last surviving group of the Yana people who spoke Yana
- ^ Last attested speaker of a Chumashan language
- ^ Last surviving native speaker; the language has since been revived.
- ^ Last surviving native speaker; some children still learn it as a second language.
- ^ Last surviving native speaker; it is being taught as a second language on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington State.
- ^ Not a native speaker of the language
- ^ Last fluent speaker; several non-fluent speakers remain
- ^ Last fluent native speaker; several non-fluent speakers remain
References
- ^ Endangered languages Ethnologue: Languages of the World. (Template:WebCite)
- ^ a b "Legend of Dolly Pentreath outlived her native tongue". This is Cornwall. 4 August 2011. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
- ^ Field linguistics: a beginner's guide.
- ^ De Bruxelles, Simon (21 May 2008). "After centuries, Cornish agree how to speak their language". The Times.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ "What happened to Erromango's languages?" by Terry Crowley, The Journal of the Polynesian Society, 106:33-64, No. 1 (1997)
- ^ "The Last Living Speaker of Wichita : NPR" (Audio interview).
- ^ "Scientists Race Around World to Save Dying Languages". Fox News. Associated Press. 20 September 2007. Retrieved 9 June 2009.
- ^ Evans, Nicholas (2010). Dying words: endangered languages and what they have to tell us. Chichester, U.K.: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-23305-3.
- ^ Newberry, Daniel. "Rescuing Languages From Extinction: The Experience of the Hoopa Valley, Karuk, and Yurok Tribes". Jefferson Public Radio. Retrieved 29 November 2011.
- ^ "Obscure language isolate will die with this woman". The Hot Word - Hot & Trending Words Daily Blog at Dictionary.com. 3 June 2012. Retrieved 2 August 2012.