Overview
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Threatened

Native Speakers Worldwide

1,655

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Recent Resources

No resources

Community Members

    No members

Revitalization Programs

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Discussion Forum

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Language Information By Source

Language endangerment in South America: The clock is ticking
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Threatened

Native Speakers Worldwide

1,655

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

No data

Older adult speakers

No data

Elder Speakers

No data

Ethnic Population

1,655

Non-monolingual speakers

No data

More about speakers

There are 905 speakers and population in Brazil (2008), and 750 speakers and population in French Guiana.

Year of info

2012

Location and Context

Countries

Brazil, French Guiana

Coordinates

No data

Location description

No data

Government support

No data

Institutional support

No data

Speakers’s attitudes

No data

Standard orthography

No data

Script (Writing system)

No data

Other writing systems

No data

More on writing systems

No data

Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Endangered

Native Speakers Worldwide

905

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

No data

Older adult speakers

No data

Elder Speakers

No data

Ethnic Population

No data

Non-monolingual speakers

No data

More about speakers

No data

Year of info

2010

Location and Context

Countries

No data

Coordinates

.747,-52.8442

Location description

No data

Government support

No data

Institutional support

No data

Speakers’s attitudes

No data

Standard orthography

No data

Script (Writing system)

No data

Other writing systems

No data

More on writing systems

No data

Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Threatened

Native Speakers Worldwide

1,180

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

No data

Older adult speakers

No data

Elder Speakers

No data

Ethnic Population

No data

Non-monolingual speakers

No data

More about speakers

530 in Brazil (2000 SIL). Includes 520 speakers of Amapari, 10 of Oiapoque. (Unchanged 2016.)

Year of info

2009

Location and Context

Countries

French Guiana; Brazil;

Coordinates

No data

Location description

Brazil: West central Amapá and northern Pará, tributaries of the upper Amapari River. 8 villages. French Guiana: 120 Camopí and Masikilí on middle Oyapock River, and 180 in 3 villages on upper Oyapock around Trois-Sauts (Grenand 1980)

Government support

No data

Institutional support

No data

Speakers’s attitudes

No data

Standard orthography

No data

Script (Writing system)

No data

Other writing systems

Brazil: West central Amapá and northern Pará, tributaries of the upper Amapari River. 8 villages. French Guiana: 120 Camopí and Masikilí on middle Oyapock River, and 180 in 3 villages on upper Oyapock around Trois-Sauts (Grenand 1980)

More on writing systems

No data

Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Endangered

Native Speakers Worldwide

~525

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

No data

Older adult speakers

No data

Elder Speakers

No data

Ethnic Population

525

Non-monolingual speakers

No data

More about speakers

Although all Wayampi still speak their native language, knowledge of Portuguese is growing fast, especially among men.

Year of info

2007

Location and Context

Countries

Brazil and French Guiana

Coordinates

No data

Location description

Amapá State, Amapari River area, between the Inipiku River (Mapari) in the west, the Karapanaty (Aroã) in the south, and the Onça and Kumakary (Água Preta) igarapés (small Amazonian waterways) in the east, Mazagao and Macapa municipalities, Terra Indigena Waiãpi.

Government support

No data

Institutional support

No data

Speakers’s attitudes

No data

Standard orthography

No data

Script (Writing system)

No data

Other writing systems

Amapá State, Amapari River area, between the Inipiku River (Mapari) in the west, the Karapanaty (Aroã) in the south, and the Onça and Kumakary (Água Preta) igarapés (small Amazonian waterways) in the east, Mazagao and Macapa municipalities, Terra Indigena Waiãpi.

More on writing systems

No data

Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

No data

Native Speakers Worldwide

No data

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

No data

Older adult speakers

No data

Elder Speakers

No data

Ethnic Population

No data

Non-monolingual speakers

No data

More about speakers

No data

Year of info

2005

Location and Context

Countries

No data

Coordinates

1.0,-52.0

Location description

No data

Government support

No data

Institutional support

No data

Speakers’s attitudes

No data

Standard orthography

No data

Script (Writing system)

No data

Other writing systems

No data

More on writing systems

No data

Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Threatened

Native Speakers Worldwide

1,180

Domains of Use

No data

Speaker Number Trends

No data

Transmission

No data

Speakers

Second-language speakers

No data

Semi-speakers

No data

Child speakers

No data

Young adult speakers

No data

Older adult speakers

No data

Elder Speakers

No data

Ethnic Population

No data

Non-monolingual speakers

No data

More about speakers

No data

Year of info

Location and Context

Countries

No data

Coordinates

No data

Location description

No data

Government support

No data

Institutional support

No data

Speakers’s attitudes

No data

Standard orthography

No data

Script (Writing system)

No data

Other writing systems

No data

More on writing systems

No data

Other languages used

No data

Domains of other languages

No data

More on context

No data

Media Resources

No resources

No resources

No resources

No resources

No resources

No resources

Filter By

No programs

  1. Endangered Languages Catalogue Project. Compiled by research teams at University of Hawai'i Mānoa and Institute for Language Information and Technology (LINGUIST List) at Eastern Michigan University
    2012. "Endangered Languages Catalogue Project. Compiled By Research Teams At University of Hawai'i Mānoa and Institute For Language Information and Technology (LINGUIST List) At Eastern Michigan University."
  2. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)
    Lewis, M. Paul (ed.). 2009. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16 edn. http://www.ethnologue.com/home.asp. (15 February, 2011.)
    http://www.ethnologue.com/
  3. Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger
    Moseley, Christopher (ed.). 2010. Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger, 3rd edn. http://www.unesco.org/culture/en/endangeredlanguages/atlas. (03 June, 2011.)
    http://www.unesco.org/culture/en/endangeredlanguages/atlas
  4. World Oral Literature Project
    "World Oral Literature Project." Online: http://www.oralliterature.org.
    http://www.oralliterature.org
  5. Language endangerment in South America: The clock is ticking
    Crevels, Mily. 2012. "Language Endangerment in South America: The Clock Is Ticking." In The Indigenous Languages of South America: A Comprehensive Guide, edited by Hans Henrich Hock et al.. 167-234. Mouton de Gruyter.
  6. South America
    Crevels, Mily. 2007. "South America." In Atlas of the World's Endangered Languages, edited by C. Moseley. 103-196. London & New York: Routledge.
  7. The World Atlas of Language Structures
    2005. "The World Atlas of Language Structures." edited by Bernard Comrie et al. Oxford University Press.
  8. La langue Wayãpi (Guyane Française)
    Grenand, Françoise. 1980. "La Langue Wayãpi (Guyane Française)." 41: Paris: Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.
  9. Les Amérindiens de la Guyane Française Aujourd'hui: Éléments de Comprehension
    Grenand, P. and F. Grenand. 1979. "Les Amérindiens De La Guyane Française Aujourd'hui: Éléments De Comprehension." In Journal de la Société des Américanistes, 66: 361-382.
  10. O desenvolvimento histórico da língua Wayampi
    Jensen, Cheryl Joyce S. 1990. "O Desenvolvimento Histórico Da Língua Wayampi." 193. Campinas, Brasil: Editora da Unicamp.
  11. La langue wayãpi (Guyane Française): Phonologie et grammaire
    Grenand Françoise. 1980. "La Langue Wayãpi (Guyane Française): Phonologie Et Grammaire." Centre National de la Reserche Scientifique.
  12. Wayampi
    Jensen, Allen A. 1994. "Wayampi." In Typological Studies in Negation, 343-364. Benjamins.
  13. The positioning of non-pronominal clitics and particles in Lowland South American languages
    Dooley, Robert A. 1990. "The Positioning of Non-pronominal Clitics and Particles in Lowland South American Languages." In Amazonian linguistics: Studies in lowland South American languages, edited by Doris L. Payne. 457-493. University of Texas Press.
  14. Dicionnaire Wayãpi-Francais
    Grenand, Francoise. 1989. "Dicionnaire Wayãpi-Francais." Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.