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What is an endangered language? The world faces enormous challenges in maintaining language diversity. Of the more than 6,912 languages, half may be in danger of disappearing in the next several decades, although this figure cannot be verified. Among factors that contribute to language endangerment are small number of speakers, their ages, whether or not children are using the language, the regular use of other languages, feelings of ethnic identity and attitudes about their language, urban drift of the younger population, government policies, language(s) used in education, as well as availability of jobs. A language may also lack important factors that contribute to survival such as an alphabet, a body of literature, and people who read and write it. A language may also lack prestige and support of its speakers (Ethnologue). The survival of a language is also threatened when speakers move to other areas where different languages are spoken, or when government policies promote the use of a specific language in school, official business and the media. These situations encourage people to learn the wider-known language and may cause them, especially the young, to stop using their mother tongue. Often those speaking lesser-known languages will choose to learn a more prestigious language with the hope of greater economic opportunities. In many parts of the world parents are teaching their children English, French, Spanish, Chinese, Arabic, Russian or some other dominant language instead of their own language for social and economic reasons. Below is data on the world's smallest languages (Ethnologue). As you can see, 1,619 (or 23%) of all world languages are spoken by fewer than half-a-million people, 548 (about 8%) of the world's languages are spoken by fewer than 100 people, and 204 (or 3%) of all world languages are spoken by fewer than 10 people.
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What is a "nearly extinct" language?
Click here to learn about the exact location of these languages. |
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| What is being done to preserve dying languages? The Foundation for Endangered Languages supports the documentation, protection and promotion of endangered languages. Scholars know that they need to record and analyze these languages before they disappear off the face of the earth. Since only about one-third of the world languages have writing systems, once these languages disappear, we will have no record of them and their cultural heritage which will disappear forever along with the loss of their speakers' knowledge of the environment and of medicinal plants. For languages that cannot be saved, it is still possible to document them for scientific purposes and for the sake of future generations who might want to study or even revive them. |
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Why try to preserve endangered languages? Wouldn't the world be simpler if there were fewer languages? Why care if languages die out? The truth is that a people's identity and culture are intimately tied to their language. Each language is unique. No one knows what riches may be hidden within an endangered language. We may never learn about the cultures whose languages have disappeared. And the wholesale loss of languages that we face today will greatly restrict how much we can learn about human culture, human cognition and the nature of language.
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'ōlelo Hawai'i
Gaeilge |
Success Stories Hawaiian Hebrew Irish Gaelic | |||||||||||||||
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Resources The International clearinghouse for endangered languages Foundation for endangered languages Bibliography on language endangerment and language revitalization UNESCO Red Book on endangered languages: Europe Wikipedia article on endangered language SIL endangered languages Bibliography of materials on endangered languages Language revival Technology for endangered languages in Australia OLAC: Open Language Archives Community Online resources for endangered languages (OREL) |