| Karnai language Karnai is an Austronesian language spoken by about 915 individuals in small villages near Wasu, Morobe Province, on Umboi Island, and near Saidor in Madang Province, Papua New Guinea. Karnai_language
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| Malasanga language Malasanga is an Austronesian language spoken by about 900 individuals in two villages on the north coast of Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea; . Malasanga_language
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| Maleu-Kilenge language Maleu-Kilenge is an Austronesian language spoken by about 5200 swidden farmers, including about 1500 ethnic Kilenge, in the Talasea District of West New Britain Province, Papua New Guinea. Maleu-Kilenge_language
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| Amanayé language Amanayé is a Tupi language spoken by about 60 individuals in the São Domingos do Capim Municipality on the Capim River in Brazil. It is considered an endangered language. Amanayé_language
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| Anambé language Anambé is a Tupi language spoken by about seven of the 77 individuals in the ethnic Anambé group in Pará, on the Cairari River in Brazil. It is being supplanted by Portuguese and is considered an endangered language. Anambé_language
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| Apiacá language Apiacá is a Tupi language that in 1986 was spoken by only two of the 90 individuals in the ethnic Apiacá group in the upper Rio Tapajos area of Matto Grosso, Brazil. It is being supplanted by Portuguese and is considered an endangered language. Apiacá_language
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| Coeur d'Alene language Coeur d'Alene is a Salishan language spoken by only five of the 800 individuals in the Coeur d'Alene Tribe on the Coeur d'Alene Reservation in northern Idaho, United States. It is considered an endangered language. Coeur_d'Alene_language
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| Arikapú language Arikapú or Maxubí is an endangered Yabutian language that as of 1998 was spoken by only six individuals in Rondônia, Brazil, at the headwaters of the Rio Branco. It is being supplanted by Portuguese. Arikapú_language
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| Aruá language Aruá is an extinct language of Brazil. The last speaker died in 1877. All that survives is a word list from 1869. Aruá_language
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| Arutani language Arutani is an Arutani-Sape language spoken by only 17 individuals in Roraima, Brazil and two others in the Karum River area of Bolivar State, Venezuela. Speakers of Arutani also speak Ninam. Arutani is near extinction. Arutani_language
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| Sapé language Sapé is an Arutani-Sape language spoken by only five individuals that lived along the Paragua and Karuna rivers in 1977. It is close to extinction. Sapé_language
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| Aurá language Aurá is a Tupi language spoken by two individuals in Maranhão, Brazil. It is considered an endangered language. Both speakers live with the Guajá, but originally come from Pará. Aurá_language
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| Baure language Baure is a nearly extinct Arawakan language spoken by only 13 of 200 ethnic tribal Baure people of the Beni department of northwest of Magdalena, Bolivia. Some Bible portions have been translated into Baure. Most speakers have been shifting to Spanish. Baure_language
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| Western Abnaki language Western Abnaki (also known as St. Francis) is an indigenous language spoken by around 20 individuals along the St. Lawrence River between Montreal and Quebec City. It is being supplanted by French and is considered nearly extinct. Western_Abnaki_language
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| Hajong language Hajong is an Indo-Aryan language with Tibeto-Burman roots spoken by more than 175,000 ethnic Hajong in the states of Assam, Meghalaya, Arunachal Pradesh and West Bengal in India and the Mymensingh District in Bangladesh. It is written in the Assamese script, and it is being supplanted by the Assamese language in India. Hajong was originally a Tibeto-Burman language, but it was linguistically mixed with Bengali and Assamese. Hajong_language
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| Halbi language Halbi (also Bastari, Halba, Halvas, Halabi, Halvi, Mahari, Mehari) is an Eastern zone Indo-Aryan language of the Bengali-Assamese subgroup, spoken by about 500,000 individuals across the central part of India. It uses SOV word order (subject-object-verb), makes strong use of affixes, and places adjectives before nouns. It is often used as a trade language, but there is a low literacy rate. Halbi_language
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| Karahawyana language Karahawyana is a language spoken by about 40 individuals near Waiwai, Amazonas, Brazil. Some Karahawyana speakers live with the Wai-Wai and others near the Hixkaryana and speak those languages respectively. It is nearly extinct. Karahawyana_language
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| Karipuná language Karipuná is a Tupi language spoken by 12-15 individuals in Rondônia, Brazil, though it is unknown how many speakers live in the forest. It is near extinction. Karipuná_language
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| Katawixi language Katawixi is a Katukinian language spoken by about 10 individuals in Amazonas, Brazil. It is nearly extinct. Katawixi_language
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| Kanamarí language Kanamarí is a Katukinian language spoken by about 650 individuals in Amazonas, Brazil. It is considered endangered. Kanamarí_language
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