Northern Kalapuya language
Appearance
(Redirected from Tualatin-Yamhill language)
Tualatin-Yamhill | |
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Northern Kalapuya | |
Native to | United States |
Region | Northwest Oregon |
Extinct | 1937, with the death of Louis Kenoyer |
Kalapuyan
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Dialects |
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | nrt |
nrt | |
Glottolog | tual1242 |
Northern Kalapuyan is an extinct Kalapuyan language indigenous to northwestern Oregon in the United States. It was spoken by Kalapuya groups in the northern Willamette Valley southwest of present-day Portland.
Three distinct dialects of the language have been identified. The Tualatin dialect (Tfalati, Atfalati) was spoken along the Tualatin River. The Yamhill (Yamhala) dialect was spoken along the Yamhill River. The language is closely related to Central Kalapuya, spoken by related groups in the central and southern Willamette Valley.
The terminal speaker of Northern Kalapuya was Louis Kenoyer who died in 1937.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ Jacobs, Melville (1945). Kalapuya Texts. University of Washington Publications in Anthropology. Vol. 11. Seattle: University of Washington.
Categories:
- Kalapuyan languages
- Indigenous languages of Oregon
- Indigenous languages of the Pacific Northwest Coast
- Languages of the United States
- Extinct languages of North America
- Languages extinct in the 1930s
- 1937 disestablishments in Oregon
- Native American history of Oregon
- Oregon stubs
- Indigenous languages of the Americas stubs