Santaim of Santaim (kyl) > LINGUIST List Language Search
Name:
Santaim
Type:
Dialect
Alternate Names:
Central Kalapuya; Santiam; Kalapuya; Tualatin; Wappato Lake; Atfalati; Tfalati; Central Kalapuyan; Lukamiute; Wapatu; Atfálati
Once Spoken in:
USA
Number of speakers:
1 (1962 W. Chafe)
(Ethnologue)
Number of speakers:
1
(World Oral Literature Project)
Code:
kyl
Code Standard:
ISO 639-3
Documentation:
SIL
Families:
Kalapuyan (Kalapooian)
Parent Dialect:
Santaim; Central Kalapuya; Santiam; Kalapuya; Tualatin; Wappato Lake; Atfalati; Tfalati; Central Kalapuyan; Lukamiute; Wapatu; Atfálati (kyl)
Brief Description:
"Kalapuya is the general term for the three languages of the Kalapuyan family, Tualatin-Yamhill, Central Kalapuyan (or Santiam), and Yoncalla, formerly spoken throughout most of the Willamette River valley of western Oregon. All three languages had well-differentiated local dialects. The Kalapuya people suffered a catastrophic demographic decline after contact with whites, and in 1856 the few survivors were settled on the Grand Ronde Reservation, where most abandoned their native language for other Indian language or Chinook Jargon. The best documented varieties of Kalapuya are the Tualatin dialect of Tualatin-Yamhill and a variety of Santiam, but Jacobs was able to collect a substantial amount of data for all three languages, much of it from elderly speakers in the 1920s and 1930s. This documentation remains largely unpublished except for an extensive collection of narrative texts (without interlinear glossing). Most Kalapuyan varieties were extinct before 1940, but a speaker of Santiam lived into the 1950s." Victor Golla, Atlas of the World's Languages 2007 pg. 16
Linguist List Status: Extinct UNESCO Status: Extinct Ethnologue Status: Nearly Extinct Sutherland's Red List: Critically Endangered
Endangerment Status
Linguist List Status: Extinct UNESCO Status: Extinct Ethnologue Status: Nearly Extinct Sutherland's Red List: Critically Endangered

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