| Jaqaru Jaqaru and Kawki are languages that belong to the Jaqi family of languages (also known as Aymara or Aru), to which Altiplano Aymara also belongs. It is spoken in the districts of Tupe and Catahuasi in the province of Yauyos, within the Peruvian department of Lima. Jaqaru is spoken in Tupe and the surrounding villages of Aysha and Qullqa (Aisa and Colca), and has at most some 3,000 native speakers, nearly all of them Spanish bilinguals and many of whom have now migrated to Lima. Jaqaru
|
| Haya language Haya (OluHaya, Swahili:Niger-Congo language spoken by the Haya people of Tanzania, in the south and southwest coast of Lake Victoria. In 1991, the population of Haya speakers was estimated at 1,200,000 people . Haya_language
|
| Wallis Island Uvea () is an island in the Pacific Ocean belonging to the French overseas collectivity (collectivité d'outre-mer, or COM) of Wallis and Futuna. Wallis_Island
|
| Tukang Besi Tukang Besi is an Austronesian language spoken in the Tukangbesi Islands in south-east Sulawesi in Indonesia by some 200,000 speakers. Tukang_Besi
|
| Taba language Taba (also known as East Makian or Makian Dalam) is an Austronesian language spoken mostly on the islands of Makian, Kayoa and southern Halmahera in North Maluku province of Indonesia by about 20,000 people. Taba_language
|
| Tai Lü language Tai Lü (or Tai Lue, Tai Le; tai51 l11; Xishuangbanna Dai; ChineseThai:South East Asia. This includes 250,000 people in China, 200,000 in Burma, 134,000 in Thailand, and 5,000 in Vietnam. The language is similar to other Tai languages.In Vietnam, Tai Lü speakers are officially recognised as the Lự ethnic minority, although in China they are classified as part of the Dai people, along with speakers of the other Tai languages (except Zhuang). Tai_Lü_language
|
| Pawnee language The Pawnee language is a Caddoan language spoken by Pawnee Native Americans located in North central Oklahoma. Once the language of thousands of Pawnees, today Pawnee is spoken by a shrinking number of elderly speakers, and as more young people continue to learn English as their first language, the status of Pawnee declines towards extinction. Pawnee_language
|
| Shasta language The Shasta language is an extinct Shastan language formerly spoken from northern California into southwestern Oregon. By 1980, only two fluent speakers, both elderly, were alive. Today, all surviving Shasta people speak English. Shasta_language
|
| Sarmi-Jayapura Bay languages Sarmi-Jayapura_Bay_languages
|
| Sarmi languages The family of Sarmi languages is a subgroup of the Sarmi–Jayapura Bay languages. It consists of 10 languages spoken in Papua province of Indonesia. Sarmi_languages
|
| Jayapura Bay languages The family of Jayapura Bay languages is a subgroup of the Sarmi–Jayapura Bay languages. It consists of 3 languages spoken in Papua province of Indonesia:Kayupulau, Ormu and Tobati. Jayapura_Bay_languages
|
| Ndyuka Ndyuká ( in English), also called Aukan, Ndyuká tongo, Aukaans, or Okanisi, is a creole language of Suriname. Most of the 25 to 30 thousand speakers live in the interior of the country, which is a part of the country covered with tropical rainforests. Ethnologue lists two related languages under the name Ndyuka.Ndyuka is based on English vocabulary, with influence from African languages in its grammar and sounds. Ndyuka
|
| Antiguan Creole Antiguan Creole is a Creole language spoken in Antigua and Barbuda.There are subtle differences in Antiguan Creole's usage by different speakers, and Antiguans often use it in combination with Standard English. The tendency to switch back and forth from Creole to Standard English often seems to correlate with the class status of the speaker. Antiguan_Creole
|
| Limónese Creole Limonense Creole (also called Limón Creole English or Mekatelyu) is an English-based creole language spoken in Limón Province on the Caribbean Sea coast of Costa Rica. Limón Coastal Creole is similar to varieties such as Colón Creole, Mískito Coastal Creole, Belizean Kriol language, and San Andrés and Providencia Creole. Limónese_Creole
|
| Hani people Talk:Hani_people
|
| Lebanese Arabic Lebanese or Lebanese Arabic is the variety of Arabic spoken in Lebanon. Lebanese Arabic is one of the Levantine varieties of Arabic. Lebanese dialect shares 80% of its vocabulary with Syrian Arabic, and about 75% with Jordanian and Palestinian Arabic dialects (today mainly living in Gaza, West Bank, Israel, and refugee camps in several countries including Lebanon and Jordan). French, Turkic, and Persian loanwords make less than 20%. Lebanese_Arabic
|
| Gelao language Kláo, more commonly known by its Chinese transliteration Gelao, is a dialect cluster of Kra languages in the Kradai language family, spoken by the Gelao people in China and Vietnam. However, many people of the Gelao ethnic group no longer speak this language. The total number of speakers is estimated to be 3,000, of which 500 are monolinguals.Ethnologue classifies Klao as four languages, perhaps as closely related to the two Lachi languages as they are to each other. Gelao_language
|
| Bolaang Mongondow language The Bolaang Mongondow language (also called simply Mongondow) is spoken in the district (Kabupaten) of Bolaang Mongondow in North Sulawesi (Celebes), Indonesia. An interesting characteristic of the language cannot pronounce the letter l, so it is spoken a somewhat like r instead. Bolaang_Mongondow_language
|
| Swedish language/Archive 1 Talk:Swedish_language/Archive_1
|
| Arapaho language The Arapaho language or "hinono'eitiit" (also "Arapahoe Language" and "hiinonoei'tiit") is a Plains Algonquian language (an areal rather than genetic grouping) spoken almost entirely by elders in Wyoming, and to a much lesser extent in Oklahoma. It is in great danger of becoming extinct. Arapaho_language
|