List of endangered languages in North America
An endangered language is a language that it is at risk of falling out of use, generally because it has few surviving speakers. If it loses all of its native speakers, it becomes an extinct language. UNESCO defines four levels of language endangerment between "safe" and "extinct":
- Vulnerable
- Definitely endangered
- Severely endangered
- Critically endangered
Today, North America only has a total of 256 living languages. However, out of those 256 languages, 238 are in the realm of extinction. That is, 92% of languages that are dying. The United States has the highest number of dying languages, 143 out of 219 languages, then Canada with 75 dying out of its 94 languages, and lastly, Greenland has the smallest number, nil of its two spoken languages.
Canada
Language | Comments | Speakers | Source |
Beaver language | 300 speakers in 1991. | Red Book of Endangered Languages | |
Bella Coola language | Also: Nuxalk language | 20 700. | |
Cayuga language | 40 to 60 speakers in 2002. | Red Book of Endangered Languages | |
Chinook Wawa language | Also: Chinook Jargon language | 83 in Canada Population total all countries: 100. | |
Northern Haida language | See Haida language | 30 in Canada Population total all countries: 45 1,100 in Canada. | |
Southern Haida language | See Haida language | 10 500. | |
Haisla language | 25 1,000. | ||
Heiltsuk language | Hai?zaqvla | 300. | |
Han language | 7 or 8 in Canada 300. | ||
Inuiuuk | ᐃᓄᐃᐆᒃ | 40 in Nunavut. | University of Central Lancashire |
Kutenai language | Kutanaxa | 6 in Canada Population total all countries: 12. | |
Maritime Sign Language | |||
Michif language | About 600 speakers in 1998. | Red Book of Endangered Languages | |
Munsee language | 7 or 8 400. | ||
Oneida language | fewer than 250 speakers in 1991. | Red Book of Endangered Languages | |
Onondaga language | 50 to 100 speakers in 1991. | Red Book of Endangered Languages | |
Potawatomi language | 100 speakers | Red Book of Endangered Languages | |
Plains Sign Talk | |||
Salish language | Red Book of Endangered Languages | ||
Straits Salish language | 20 in Canada 3,000. | ||
Sechelt language | Also: Shishalh language | 40 550. | |
Sekani language | 30 to 40 600. | ||
Seneca language | 25 speakers in 1991. | Red Book of Endangered Languages | |
Squamish language | 15 2,300. | ||
Tagish language | 2 400 possibly. | ||
Tahltan language | 35 750. | ||
Tlingit language | 145 speakers in Canada in 1998. | Red Book of Endangered Languages | |
Tsuut’ina language | Also: Tsuu T'ina language, Sarsi language, Sarcee language | 50 | Red Book of Endangered Languages |
Tuscarora language | 7 or 8 in Canada Population total all countries: 11 to 13. | ||
Western Abnaki language | 20 1,800 including Eastern Abnaki in USA. |
United States
Language | Comments | Speakers | Source |
Achumawi language | 10 nonfluent speakers 1,000. | ||
Alutiiq language | 30 speakers 1,000. | ||
Ahtena language | 80 500. | ||
Kiowa Apache language | 18 1,000. | ||
Lipan Apache language | 2 or 3 100. | ||
Arikara language | 20 3,000. | ||
Atsugewi language | 3 200 1,350 with Achumawi. | ||
Caddo language | 25 3,371. | ||
Cahuilla language | 7 to 20 35. | ||
Chetco language | 5 100 possibly. | ||
Chinook language | 12 speakers of Kiksht dialect 300 possibly. | ||
Chinook Wawa language | 17 in the USA. | ||
Clallam language | 10 Several thousands. | ||
Coeur d'Alene language | 5 800. | ||
Comanche language | less than 130 | ||
Coos language | 1 or 2 250. | ||
Degexit'an language | 20 to 30 250 to 300. | ||
Gros Ventre language | 10 Very few semispeakers in 2000 1,200. | ||
Northern Haida language | 15 in the USA 600 in the USA. | ||
Han language | 7 or 8 in Alaska Population total all countries: 14 300. | ||
Hawai'i Sign Language | A few users out of about 6,000 profoundly deaf people in Hawaii, 72,000 deaf or hard-of-hearing people in Hawaii. | ||
Holikachuk language | 12 200. | ||
Hupa language | 8 2,000. | ||
Kalapuya language | 1 or 2. | ||
Kansa language | 19 250. | ||
Karok language | 10 1,900. | ||
Kashaya language | 45. | ||
Kawaiisu language | 8 to 10 35. | ||
Klamath-Modoc language | 1 2,000. | ||
Upper Kuskokwim language | 40 3 households 160. | ||
Kutenai language | 6 in the USA. | ||
Luiseño language | 30 to 40 2,000. | ||
Lushootseed language | 60 Population evenly divided between the northern and southern dialects 2,000. | ||
Northeast Maidu language | 1 to 2 108. | ||
Northwest Maidu language | 3 to 6 200. | ||
Mandan language | 6 400. | ||
Menominee language | 39 . | ||
Central Sierra Miwok language | 12 Population includes 6 Eastern Central Sierra, 6 Western Central Sierra Possibly 5,000 all Miwok. | ||
Lake Miwok language | 1 to 2. | ||
Northern Sierra Miwok language | 6. | ||
Plains Miwok language | 1. | ||
Southern Sierra Miwok language | 7 Southern Central Sierra Miwok. | ||
Mono language | Western Mono: 37 to 41 Population includes 10-12 North Fork, 15 Auberry, 7-8 Big Sandy, 5-6 Dunlap, no Waksachi. Eastern Mono: 50 600. | ||
Nisenan language | 1. | ||
Osage language | 5 15,000. | ||
Panamint language | 20 100. | ||
Pawnee language | 20 2,500. | ||
Plains Sign Talk | |||
Central Pomo language | 2 to 5 4,766. | ||
Southeastern Pomo language | 5. | ||
Southern Pomo language | 1. | ||
Quapaw language | 34 2,000. | ||
Quileute language | 10 300. | ||
Straits Salish language | |||
Serrano language | 1. | ||
Snohomish language | 10 800. | ||
Tanacross language | 35 Population includes 3 in the Healy Lake dialect, 32 in Mansfield-Ketchumstuck 120. | ||
Tanaina language | 75 900. | ||
Lower Tanana language | 30 380. | ||
Tolowa language | 4 to 5 1,000. | ||
Tübatulabal language | 6 900. | ||
Tuscarora language | 4 to 5 in the USA 1,200 in the USA. | ||
Tututni language | 10. | ||
Wasco-Wishram language | 69 7 monolinguals 750 possibly. | ||
Washo language | 10 1,500. | ||
Wichita language | 3 1,400. | ||
Wintu language | 5 or 6 2,244 | ||
Yokutsan languages | 78 speakers of Northern Foothill Yokuts 2,500. | ||
Yuchi language | 10 to 12 1,500. | ||
Yurok language | 12 3,000 to 4,500 possibly. |