Na-Dene
Na-Dene is Native American language family which includes the Athabascan languages, Eyak, and Tlingit. Haida, with 15 fluent speakers (M. Krauss, 1995), was once considered a member of Na-Dene, but most linguists dispute this today. The language family tree is as follows:
- Na-Dene languages
- Tlingit language: 700 speakers (M. Krauss, 1995)
- Athapaskan-Eyak languages
- Eyak language: 1 speaker, (N. Barnes, 1996)
- Athapaskan languages
- Athapaskan proper
- Ahtna language: 80 speakers, (M. Krauss, 1995)
- Beaver language
- Chipewyan language
- Han language: 7 or 8 fluent speakers, (M. Krauss, 1995)
- Holikachuk language: 12 fluent speakers, (M. Krauss, 1995)
- Koyukon language: 300 speakers (M. Krauss, 1995)
- Tanaina language: 75 or fewer speakers (M. Krauss, 1997)
- Lower Tanana language: 30 or fewer speakers (M. Krauss, 1995)
- Upper Tanana language: 105 or fewer speakers (M. Krauss, 1995)
- Tolowa language: 5 speakers (SIL, 1977)
- Apachean languages
- Jicarilla Apache language: 812 speakers, (1990 census)
- Kiowa Apache language: 18 speakers, (1990 census)
- Lipan Apache language: 2 or 3 speakers, (1981 R.W. Young)
- Mescalero-Chiricahua Apache language: 1,800 speakers, incl. 279 Chiricahua speakers (1990 census)
- Western Apache language: 12,693 speakers (1990 census)
- Navajo language: 148,530 speakers, (1990 census)
- Athapaskan-Californian languages
- Hupa language: 8 fluent speakers, (James Brook, 1998, NY Times, April 9, p A1, A20)
- Kato (Mattole-Wailaki) language: 10 fluent speakers(?), (Chafe, 1962)
- Athapaskan proper
According to Joseph H. Greenberg's highly controversial classification of the languages of Native North America, Na-Dene-Athabascan is one of the three main groups of Native languages spoken in the Americas, and represents a distinct wave of migration from Asia to the Americas. The other two are Eskimo-Aleut, spoken in Alaska and the Canadian Arctic; and Amerind, Greenberg's most controversial classification, which includes every language native to the Americas that is not Eskimo-Aleut or Na-Dene.
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