| Katukína language Katukína is a Katukinian language spoken by only one person in 1976 in Acre, Brazil. It is probably extinct. Katukína_language
|
| Kayort language Kayort is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by about 22,000 people in Dakuwa Danga, Nepal. Kayort_language
|
| Kreye language Kreye is a Macro-Gê language that is spoken by about 30 individuals in Maranhão and Pará, Brazil. It is considered an endangered language. Kreye_language
|
| Leco language Leco is a language isolate that is spoken by about 20 individuals in areas east of Lake Titicaca, Bolivia. The Leco ethnic population is about 80. There have been reports that Leco may already be extinct.Leco is occasionally linked to the Sechura-Catacao languages. Leco_language
|
| Mal Paharia language Mal Paharia, is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by about 60,000 of 111,000 ethnic Mal Paharia in the states of Jharkhand and West Bengal in India and possibly in Bangladesh. There is a positive attitude amongst speakers of the language, and the language health is considered vigorous. Nonetheless, some speakers have shifted to Bengali. Mal_Paharia_language
|
| Mapoyo language Mapoyo is a Carib language that was spoken by three individuals in 2000 along Suapure and Parguaza Rivers, Venezuela. The ethnic population is about 186. In 2007 there were only two speakers. Mapoyo_language
|
| Nahari language Nahari is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by about 100 people in 1961 in the states of Chhattisgarh and Orissa in India. It was reported in 1994 that all speakers of Nahari were actually native speakers of Nimadi. Nahari_language
|
| Nkoroo language Nkọrọọ is a Niger Congo language spoken by about 4500 ethnic Nkọrọọ in Rivers State, Nigeria. Nkoroo_language
|
| Pacahuara language Pacahuara (Pacawara) is a nearly extinct Panoan language spoken by only 17 of 18 ethnic tribal Pacahuara people of the Beni department of northwest of Magdalena, Bolivia. The Pacahuara are fully integrated with the Chácobo. Pacahuara_language
|
| Chácobo language Chácobo is a Panoan language spoken by about 550 of 860 ethnic tribal Chácobo people of the Beni department of northwest of Magdalena, Bolivia. Chácobo children are learning the language as a first language. Chácobo_language
|
| Pémono language Pémono is a Carib language that was spoken by only an eighty-year-old woman when discovered in 1998 in Venezuela. The ethnic population now speaks Spanish. Pémono may already be extinct. Pémono_language
|
| Reyesano language Reyesano is a Tacanan language that was spoken by only a few speakers, including children, in 1961 in Bolivia. It is considered nearly extinct. Evidently the name comes from the name of the town of Reyes, of the Province of Ballivián in the Departmentof the Beni in the plains adjacent to the Bolivian Amazon. Reyesano_language
|
| Sikiana language Sikiana is a Carib language that was spoken by 33 people in Brazil and 15 people in Suriname. It was spoken in Venezuela at one time and is now probably extinct there. Sikiana as a whole is near extinction. Sikiana_language
|
| Yabarana language Yabarana is a Carib language that was spoken by 20 - 50 people in 1977 in Venezuela. It is nearly extinct. Yabarana_language
|
| Labu language Labu (called Hapa by its speakers) is an Austronesian language spoken by about 1,600 people (1989) in three older villages and one new one across the Markham River from Lae in Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea. Although it belongs to the Lower Markham languages, Labu appears to have been strongly influenced by the coastal languages of the Huon Gulf, Bukawa in particular. Labu_language
|
| Macaguán language Macaguán is a Guahiban language that was spoken by about 400 people in Colombia. Many of its speakers are monoglots. Macaguán_language
|
| Guahibo language Guahibo, the native language of the Guahibo people, is a Guahiban language that is spoken by about 23,006 people in Colombia and additional 8,428 in Venezuela. There is a 40% rate of monolingualism, and a 45% literacy rate. Guahibo_language
|
| Cuiba language Cuiba is a Guahiban language that is spoken by about 2300 people in Colombia and additional 650 in Venezuela. More than half of Cuiba speakers are monoglot, and in Colombia there is a 45% literacy rate. Cuiba_language
|
| Guayabero language Guayabero is a Guahiban language that is spoken by about 1200 people in Colombia. Many of its speakers are monoglots, with few fluent Spanish speakers in the population. Guayabero_language
|
| Playero language Playero is a Guahiban language that is spoken by about 250 people in Colombia. Speakers are somewhat acculterated and bilingual in Spanish. Playero_language
|