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词条 Language isolate
释义

  1. "Genetic" or "genealogical" relationships

  2. Looking for relationships

  3. Extinct isolates

  4. Sign language isolates

  5. List of language isolates by continent

     Africa  Asia  Oceania  Europe  North America  South America 

  6. See also

  7. References

  8. Bibliography

  9. External links

{{short description|Natural language with no demonstrable genealogical relationship with other languages}}{{More footnotes|date=April 2017}}

A language isolate, in the absolute sense, is a natural language with no demonstrable genealogical (or "genetic") relationship with other languages, one that has not been demonstrated to descend from an ancestor common with any other language. Language isolates are in effect language families consisting of a single language. Commonly cited examples include Ainu, Basque, Korean, Sumerian, Elamite, and Vedda, though in each case a minority of linguists claim to have demonstrated a relationship with other languages.[1]

Some sources use the term "language isolate" to indicate a branch of a larger family with only one surviving member. For instance, Albanian, Armenian and Greek are commonly called Indo-European isolates. While part of the Indo-European family, they do not belong to any established branch (such as the Romance, Indo-Iranian, Celtic, Slavic or Germanic branches), but instead form independent branches. Similarly, within the Romance languages, Sardinian is a relative isolate. However, without a qualifier, isolate is understood to mean having no demonstrable genetic relationship to any other known language.

Some languages once seen as isolates may be reclassified as small families. This happened with Japanese (now included in the Japonic family along with Ryukyuan languages such as Okinawan) and Georgian (now the most dominant or standard of the Kartvelian languages of the Caucasus). The Etruscan language of Italy has long been considered an isolate, but some have proposed that it is related to the so-called Tyrsenian languages, an extinct family of closely related ancient languages proposed by Helmut Rix (1998), including the Rhaetian, formerly spoken in the central Alps, and the Lemnian language, formerly spoken on the Greek island of Lemnos.

Language isolates may be seen as a special case of unclassified languages that remain unclassified even after extensive efforts. If such efforts eventually do prove fruitful, a language previously considered an isolate may no longer be considered one, as happened with the Yanyuwa language of northern Australia, which has been placed in the Pama–Nyungan family. Since linguists do not always agree on whether a genetic relationship has been demonstrated, it is often disputed whether a language is an isolate or not.

"Genetic" or "genealogical" relationships

The term "genetic relationship" is meant in the genealogical sense of historical linguistics, which groups most languages spoken in the world today into a relatively small number of families, according to reconstructed descent from common ancestral languages. A "genetic relationship" is a connection between languages, like similarities in vocabulary or grammar, that can be attributed to a common ancestral proto-language that diverged into multiple languages or branches. For example, English is related to other Indo-European languages and Mandarin Chinese is related to other Sino-Tibetan languages. By this criterion, each language isolate constitutes a family of its own, which explains the exceptional interest that these languages have received from linguists.[2]

Looking for relationships

It is possible that all natural languages spoken in the world today are related by direct or indirect descent from a single ancestral tongue. The established language families would then be only the upper branches of the genealogical tree of all languages, or, equally, lower progeny of a parent tongue. For this reason, language isolates have been the object of numerous studies seeking to uncover their genealogy. For instance, Basque has been compared with every living and extinct Eurasian language family known, from Sumerian to Kartvelian, without conclusive results.

In some situations, a language with no ancestor can arise. This frequently happens with sign languages—most famously in the case of Nicaraguan Sign Language, where deaf children with no language were placed together and developed a new language. Similarly, if deaf parents were to raise a group of hearing children who have no contact with others until adulthood, they might develop an oral language among themselves and keep using it later, teaching it to their children, and so on. Eventually, it could develop into the full-fledged language of a population. With unsigned languages, this is not very likely to occur at any one time but, over the tens of thousands of years of human prehistory, the likelihood of this occurring at least a few times increases. There are also creole languages and constructed languages such as Esperanto, which do not descend directly from a single ancestor but have become the language of a population; however, they do take elements from existing languages.

Extinct isolates

Caution is required when speaking of extinct languages as isolates. Despite their great age, Sumerian and Elamite can be safely classified as isolates, as the languages are well enough known that, if modern relatives existed, they would be recognizably related.{{Citation needed|date=April 2018}}

However, many extinct languages are very poorly attested, and the fact that they cannot be linked to other languages may be a reflection of our poor knowledge of them. Hattic, Gutian,[3] and Kassite are also believed to be isolates by mainstream majority, but their status is disputed by a minority of linguists. Many extinct languages of the Americas such as Cayuse and Majena may likewise have been isolates. A language thought to be an isolate may turn out to be relatable to other languages once enough material is recovered, but material is unlikely to be recovered if a language was not documented in writing.

Sign language isolates

{{further|Deaf-community sign language|Village sign language}}

A number of sign languages have arisen independently, without any ancestral language, and thus are true language isolates. The most famous of these is the Nicaraguan Sign Language, a well documented case of what has happened in schools for the deaf in many countries. In Tanzania, for example, there are seven schools for the deaf, each with its own sign language with no known connection to any other language.[4] Sign languages have also developed outside schools, in communities with high incidences of deafness, such as Kata Kolok in Bali, the Adamorobe Sign Language in Ghana, the Urubu Sign Language in Brazil, several Mayan sign languages, and half a dozen sign languages of the hill tribes in Thailand including the Ban Khor Sign Language.

Studies are also being conducted on Al-Sayyid Bedouin Sign Language (ABSL) in an isolated village in Israel. The language was developed in isolation for over 75 years by both deaf and hearing people within the village.[5]

These and more are all presumed isolates or small local families, because many deaf communities are made up of people whose hearing parents do not use sign language, and have manifestly, as shown by the language itself, not borrowed their sign language from other deaf communities during the recorded history of these languages.{{Citation needed|date=September 2008}}

List of language isolates by continent

{{Refimprove section|date=February 2007}}

Below is a list of known language isolates, arranged by continent, along with notes on possible relations to other languages or language families.

The Status column indicates the long-term viability of the language, according to the definitions of the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.{{Citation needed|date=March 2019}} "Vibrant" languages are those in full use by speakers of every generation, with consistent native acquisition by children. "Vulnerable" languages have a similarly wide base of native speakers, but a restricted use and the long-term risk of language shift. "Endangered" languages are either acquired irregularly or only spoken by older generations. "Moribund" languages have only a few remaining native speakers, with no new acquisition, highly restricted use, and near-universal bilingualism. "Extinct" languages have no native speakers, but are sufficiently documented to be classified as isolates.

Africa

{{further|Languages of Africa#Unclassified languages}}

With few exceptions, all of Africa's languages have been gathered into four major phyla: Afroasiatic, Niger–Congo, Nilo-Saharan and Khoisan.[6] However, the genetic unity of some language families, like Nilo-Saharan and Khoisan, is questionable, and so there may be many more language families and isolates than currently accepted. Data for several African languages, like Kwadi and Kwisi, are not sufficient for classification. In addition, Jalaa, Shabo, Laal, Kujargé, and a few other languages within Nilo-Saharan and Afroasiatic-speaking areas may turn out to be isolates upon further investigation. Defaka and Ega are highly divergent languages located within Niger-Congo-speaking areas, and may also possibly be language isolates.[7]

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Bangime2,000 VibrantMali Spoken in the Bandiagara Escarpment. Used as an anti-language.
Hadza1,000VulnerableTanzania Spoken on the southern shore of Lake Eyasi in the southwest of Arusha Region. Once listed as an outlier among the Khoisan languages. Language use is vigorous, though there are fewer than 1,000 speakers.
Jalaa200 MoribundNigeriaSpoken in Bauchi State. Poorly known. Strongly influenced by Dikaka, but most vocabulary is very unusual.
Laal750MoribundChadSpoken in three villages along the Chari River in Moyen-Chari Region. Poorly known. Also known as Gori. Possibly a distinct branch of Niger–Congo, Chadic of the Afroasiatic languages, or mixed.
Sandawe60,000VibrantTanzaniaSpoken in the northwest of Dodoma Region. Tentatively linked to the Khoe languages.
Shabo400EndangeredEthiopiaPoorly known. Spoken in Anderaccha, Gecha, and Kaabo of the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region. Linked to the Gumuz and Koman families in the proposed Komuz branch of the Nilo-Saharan languages

Asia

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Ainu10 MoribundJapan, Russia Formerly spoken on southern Sakhalin, and all of the Kuril Islands and Hokkaido, now reduced to a handful of speakers in Hokkaido. May actually constitute a small language family, if the extinct varieties are classed as languages rather than dialects. Possibly related to the unattested language of the Emishi.
Burushaski96,800VulnerablePakistan Spoken in the Hunza Valley of Gilgit-Baltistan. Linked to Caucasian languages, Indo-European, and Na-Dene languages in various proposals.
Elamite ExtinctIran Formerly spoken in Elam, along the northeast coast of the Persian Gulf. Attested from around 2800 BC to 300 BC. Some propose a relationship to the Dravidian languages (see Elamo-Dravidian), but this is not well-supported.
Korean77,230,000 VibrantNorth Korea, South Korea and Northeast China Connections to the Altaic languages had been proposed, but widely discredited.[8] It has also been proposed that Korean may be related to Japanese in the Japanese-Korean classification hypothesis, both with and without a common Altaic ancestor. Sometimes classified as a language family, forming the Koreanic family if the Jeju dialect is classified as a separate language rather than a Korean dialect.
Kusunda3 MoribundNepal Spoken in the Gandaki Zone. The recent discovery of a few speakers shows that it is not demonstrably related to anything else.
Nihali2,000 EndangeredIndia Also known as Nahali. Spoken in northeastern Maharashtra and southwestern Madhya Pradesh, along the Tapti River. Strong lexical Munda influence from Korku. Used as anti-language by speakers.
Nivkh200 MoribundRussia Also known as Gilyak. Spoken in the lower Amur River basin and in the northern part of Sakhalin. Dialects sometimes considered two languages. Has been linked to Chukotko-Kamchatkan languages.
Sumerian ExtinctIraq Spoken in Mesopotamia until around 1800 BC, but used as a classical language until 100 AD. Long-extinct but well-attested language of ancient Sumer. Included in various proposals involving everything from Basque to the Sino-Tibetan languages.

Oceania

The languages of New Guinea are poorly studied, and candidates for isolate status are likely to change when more becomes known about them.

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Abinomn300 VibrantIndonesia Spoken in the far north of New Guinea. Also known as Bas or Foia. Language use is vigorous, despite low number of speakers.
Anêm ?800 VibrantPapua New Guinea Spoken on the northwest coast of New Britain. Perhaps related to Yélî Dnye and Ata.
Ata ?2,000VibrantPapua New Guinea Spoken in the central highlands of New Britain. Also known as Wasi. Perhaps related to Yélî Dnye and Anem.
Enindhilyagwa ?1,486 VulnerableAustralia Spoken on Groote Eylandt in the Gulf of Carpentaria. Also known as Andilyaugwa. Classified as part of the Macro-Gunwinyguan languages.
Giimbiyu ?ExtinctAustraliaSpoken in the northern part of Arnhem Land until the early 1980s. Part of a proposal for an Arnhem Land language family.
Kol4,000 VibrantPapua New Guinea Spoken in the northeastern part of New Britain. Possibly related to the poorly-known Sulka, or the Baining languages.
Kuot2,400 VulnerablePapua New Guinea Spoken on New Ireland. Also known as Panaras.
Malak-Malak10MoribundAustraliaSpoken in northern Australia. Sometimes linked with the Wagaydyic languages in a Northern Daly family.
Murrinh-patha ?1,973VibrantAustraliaSpoken on the eastern coast of Joseph Bonaparte Gulf in the Top End. Proposed linkage to Ngan’gityemerri in Southern Daly family.
Ngan’gityemerri ?26MoribundAustraliaSpoken in the Top End along the Daly River. Proposed linkage to Murrinh-patha in a Southern Daly family.
Tiwi2,040 VulnerableAustralia Spoken in the Tiwi Islands in the Timor Sea. Traditionally Tiwi is polysynthetic, but the Tiwi spoken by younger generations is not.
Wagiman18MoribundAustraliaSpoken in the southern part of the Top End. Once thought to be a member of the Macro-Gunwinyguan family, but this proposal has fallen out of favor.
Wardaman50MoribundAustraliaSpoken in the southern part of the Top End. Sometimes the extinct and poorly-attested Dagoman and Yangman dialects are treated as separate languages in a Yagmanic family. Previously classified as Macro-Gunwinyguan, but no evidence was found to support this.

Europe

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Basque751,500 (2016),[9] 1,185,500 passive speakers VulnerableSpain, France Natively known as Euskara, the Basque language, found in the historical region of the Basque Country between France and Spain, is the second most-widely spoken language isolate after Korean. It has no known living relatives, although Aquitanian is commonly regarded as related to or a direct ancestor of Basque. Some linguists have claimed similarities with various languages of the Caucasus that are indicative of a relationship, while others have proposed a relation to Iberian and to the hypothetical Dené–Caucasian languages.

North America

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
AlseaExtinctUnited StatesPoorly attested. Spoken along the central coast of Oregon until 1942. Sometimes regarded as two separate languages. Often included in the Penutian hypothesis in a Coast Oregon Penutian branch.
Atakapa ExtinctUnited States Spoken on the Gulf coast of eastern Texas and southwestern Louisiana until the early 1900s. Often linked to Muskogean in a Gulf hypothesis.
Chimariko ExtinctUnited States Spoken in northern California until the 1950s. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.
Chitimacha ExtinctUnited States Well-attested. Spoken along the Gulf coast of southeastern Louisiana until 1940. Possibly in the Totozoquean family of Mesoamerica.
Coahuilteco ExtinctUnited States, Mexico Spoken in southern Texas and northeastern Mexico until the 1700s. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.
Cuitlatec ExtinctMexico Spoken in northern Guerrero until the 1960s. Formerly considered Macro-Chibchan.
Esselen ExtinctUnited States Poorly known. Spoken in the Big Sur region of California until the early 1800s. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.
Haida14 MoribundCanada, United States Spoken in the Haida Gwaii archipelago off the northwest coast of British Columbia, and the southern islands of the Alexander Archipelago in southeastern Alaska. Some proposals connect it to the Na-Dené languages, but these have fallen into disfavor.
Huave18,000 EndangeredMexico Spoken in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, in the southeast of Oaxaca state. Part of the Penutian hypothesis when extended to Mexico, but this idea has generally been abandoned.
Karuk12 MoribundUnited States Spoken along the Klamath River in northwestern California. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.
Keres10,670EndangeredUnited StatesSpoken in several pueblos throughout New Mexico, including Cochiti and Acoma Pueblos. Has two main dialects: Eastern and Western. Sometimes those two dialects are separated into languages in a Keresan family.
Kutenai245 MoribundCanada, United States Spoken in the Rockies of northeastern Idaho, northwestern Montana and southeastern British Columbia. Attempts have been made to place it in a Macro-Algic or Macro-Salishan family, but these have not gained significant support.
Natchez ExtinctUnited States Spoken in southern Mississippi and eastern Louisiana until 1957. Often linked to Muskogean in a Gulf hypothesis. Attempts at revival have produced 6 people with some fluency.
Purépecha124,494 EndangeredMexico Spoken in the north of Michoacán state. Language of the ancient Tarascan kingdom. Sometimes regarded as two languages.
Salinan ExtinctUnited States Spoken along the south-central coast of California until 1958. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.
Seri764 Vulnerable Mexico Spoken along the coast of the Gulf of California, in the southwest of Sonora state. Formerly spoken on Tiburón Island in the Gulf of California. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.
Siuslaw Extinct United States Spoken on the southwest coast of Oregon until the 1970s. Likely related to Alsea, Coosan languages, or possibly the Wintuan languages. Part of the Penutian hypothesis.
Takelma Extinct United States Spoken in western Oregon until 1934. Part of the Penutian hypothesis. A specific relationship with Kalapuyan is now rejected.
Timucua Extinct United States Well attested. Spoken in northern Florida and southern Georgia until the late 1700s. A connection with the poorly known Tawasa language has been suggested, but this may be a dialect.
Tonkawa Extinct United States Spoken in central and northern Texas until the early 1940s.
Tunica Extinct United States Spoken in western Mississippi, northeastern Louisiana, and southeastern Arkansas until 1948. Attempts at revitalization have produced 32 second-language speakers.
Washo20 Moribund United States Spoken along the Truckee River in the Sierra Nevada of eastern California and northwestern Nevada. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.
Yana Extinct United States Well-attested. Spoken in northern California until 1916. Part of the Hokan hypothesis.
Yuchi4 Moribund United States Spoken in Oklahoma, but formerly spoken in eastern Tennessee. A connection to the Siouan languages have been proposed.
Zuni9,620 Vulnerable United StatesSpoken in Zuni Pueblo in northwestern New Mexico. Links to Penutian and Keres have been proposed.

South America

Language Speakers Status Countries Comments
Aikanã200 Endangered Brazil Spoken in the Amazon of eastern Rondônia. Arawakan has been suggested.
Andoque370 EndangeredColombia, Peru Spoken on the upper reaches of the Japurá River. Extinct in Peru. Possibly Witotoan.
Betoi ExtinctVenezuela Spoken in the Apure River basin near the Colombian border until the 18th century. Paezan has been suggested.
Camsá4,000 Endangered Colombia Spoken in Sibundoy in the Putumayo Department. Also known as Kamsa, Coche, Sibundoy, Kamentxa, Kamse, or Camëntsëá.
Candoshi-Shapra1,100 Endangered Peru Spoken along the Chapuli, Huitoyacu, Pastaza, and Morona river valleys in southwestern Loreto. Could be related to the extinct and poorly-attested Chirino language.
Canichana Extinct Bolivia Spoken in the Llanos de Moxos region of Beni Department until around 2000. A connection with the extinct Tequiraca (Auishiri) has been proposed.
Cayuvava4 Moribund Bolivia Spoken in the Amazon west of Mamore River, north of Santa Ana del Yacuma in the Beni Department.
Chimane5,300Vulnerable BoliviaSpoken along the Beni river in Beni Department. Also spelled Tsimané. Sometimes split into multiple languages in a Moséten family. Linked to the Chonan languages in a Moseten-Chonan hypothesis.
Chiquitano5,900Endangered Bolivia, BrazilSpoken in the eastern part of Santa Cruz department and the southwestern part of Mato Grosso state. Formerly regarded as a member of the Macro-Jê family, but this claim was unsubstantiated.
Cofán2,400 Endangered Colombia, Ecuador Spoken in northern Sucumbíos Province and southern Putumayo Department. Also called A'ingae. Sometimes classified as Chibchan, but the similarities appear to be due to borrowings. Seriously endangered in Colombia.
Fulniô1,000Moribund BrazilSpoken in the states of Paraíba, Pernambuco, Alagoas, Sergipe, and the northern part of Bahia. Divided into two dialects, Fulniô and Yatê. Sometimes classified as a Macro-Jê language, but not much evidence to support this.
Guató6Moribund BrazilSpoken in the far south of Mato Grosso near the Bolivian border. Previously classified as Macro-Jê, but no evidence was found to support this.
Itonama5 Moribund Bolivia Spoken in the far-eastern part of Beni Department. Paezan has been suggested.
Kanoê5 Moribund Brazil Spoken in southeastern Rondônia. Also known as Kapishana. Part of a Macro-Paesan proposal.
Kunza Extinct Chile Spoken in areas near Salar de Atacama until the 1950s. Also known as Atacameño. Part of a Macro-Paesan proposal.
Kwaza54MoribundBrazilSpoken in eastern Rondônia. Connections have been proposed with Aikanã and Kanoê.
Leco20 Moribund Bolivia Spoken in the Andes east of Lake Titicaca.
Mapuche260,000 Vulnerable Chile, Argentina Spoken in areas of the far-southern Andes and in the Chiloé Archipelago. Also known as Mapudungun, Araucano or Araucanian. Considered a family of 2 languages by Ethnologue. Variously part of Andean, Macro-Panoan, or Mataco–Guaicuru proposals. Sometimes Huilliche is treated as a separate language, reclassifying Mapuche into an Araucanian family.
MunichiExtinct PeruSpoken in the southern part of Loreto Region until the late 1990s. Possibly related to Arawakan languages
Movima1,400 Vulnerable Bolivia Spoken in the Llanos de Moxos, in the north of Beni Department.
Oti Extinct Brazil Spoken in São Paulo until the early 1900s. Macro-Jê has been suggested.
Páez60,000 Vulnerable Colombia Spoken in the northern part of Cauca Department. Several proposed relationships in the Paezan hypothesis but nothing conclusive.
PuelcheExtinct Argentina, ChileSpoken in the Pampas region until the 1930s. Sometimes linked to Het. Included in a proposed Macro-Jibaro family.
TequiracaExtinct Peru Spoken in the central part of Loreto until the 1950s. Also known as Auishiri. A connection with Canichana has been proposed.
Trumai51 Moribund Brazil Settled on the upper Xingu River. Currently reside in the Xingu National Park in the northern part of Mato Grosso.
Urarina3,000 Vulnerable Peru Spoken in the central part of the Loreto Region. Part of the Macro-Jibaro proposal.
Waorani2,000 Vulnerable Ecuador, Peru Also known as Sabela. Spoken between the Napo and Curaray rivers. Could be spoken by several uncontacted groups.
Warao28,000 Endangered Guyana, Suriname, Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago Spoken in the Orinoco Delta. Sometimes linked to Paezan.
Yaghan1 Moribund Chile Spoken in far-southern Tierra del Fuego. Also called Yámana. Last native speaker is Cristina Calderón, who is 90 years old.
Yaruro7,900Vibrant VenezuelaSpoken along the Orinoco, Cinaruco, Meta, and Apure rivers. Linked to the extinct Esmeralda language.
Yuracaré2,700 Endangered Bolivia Spoken in the foothills of the Andes, in Cochabamba and Beni Departments. Connections to Mosetenan, Pano–Tacanan, Arawakan, and Chonan have been suggested.

See also

  • Unclassified languages
  • List of language families

References

1. ^{{Cite journal|last=Campbell|first=Lyle|date=2010-08-24|title=Language Isolates and Their History, or, What's Weird, Anyway?|journal=Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society|language=en|volume=36|issue=1|pages=16–31|doi=10.3765/bls.v36i1.3900|issn=2377-1666}}
2. ^{{Cite book|title=Language contact, creolization, and genetic linguistics|last=Grey.|first=Thomason, Sarah|others=Kaufman, Terrence, 1937-|isbn=978-0520078932|location=Berkeley|oclc=16525266|year = 1991}}
3. ^Jump up ^ Mallory, J.P.; Mair, Victor H. (2000). The Tarim Mummies. London: Thames & Hudson. pp. 281–282. {{ISBN|978-0-500-05101-6}}.
4. ^Tanzanian Sign Language (TSL) Dictionary. H.R.T. Muzale, University of Dar es Salaam, 2003
5. ^{{Cite news|url=https://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/american-sign-language|title=American Sign Language|date=2015-08-18|newspaper=NIDCD|language=en|access-date=2017-01-25}}
6. ^Blench, Roger. 2017. African language isolates. In Language Isolates, edited by Lyle Campbell, pp. 176-206. Routledge.
7. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.rogerblench.info/Language/Niger-Congo/General/Niger-Congo%20an%20alternative%20view.pdf|title=Niger-Congo: an Alternative View|last=Blench|first=Roger|date=|website=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=}}
8. ^Georg et al. 1999: 73–74
9. ^{{fr}} VI° Enquête Sociolinguistique en Euskal herria (Communauté Autonome d'Euskadi, Navarre et Pays Basque Nord) (2016).)

Bibliography

  • Campbell, Lyle, ed. 2017. Language Isolates. Routledge.
  • Campbell, Lyle. (1997). American Indian languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America. New York: Oxford University Press. {{ISBN |0-19-509427-1}}.
  • Goddard, Ives (Ed.). (1996). Languages. Handbook of North American Indians (W. C. Sturtevant, General Ed.) (Vol. 17). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. {{ISBN |0-16-048774-9}}.
  • Goddard, Ives. (1999). Native Languages and Language Families of North America (rev. and enlarged ed. with additions and corrections). [Map]. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press (Smithsonian Institution). (Updated version of the map in Goddard 1996). {{ISBN |0-8032-9271-6}}.
  • Grimes, Barbara F. (Ed.). (2000). Ethnologue: Languages of the world, (14th ed.). Dallas, TX: SIL International. {{ISBN |1-55671-106-9}}. (Online edition: http://www.ethnologue.com/).
  • Mithun, Marianne. (1999). The languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN |0-521-23228-7}} (hbk); {{ISBN |0-521-29875-X}}.
  • Sturtevant, William C. (Ed.). (1978–present). Handbook of North American Indians (Vol. 1–20). Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution. (Vols. 1–3, 16, 18–20 not yet published).

External links

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20150527000725/http://www.ethnologue.com/subgroups/language-isolate-0 Ethnologue's list of language isolates]
{{Language families}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Language Isolate}}

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