Inhabit Media Inc.
- Arctic Quebec
- Saglouc
- Itivimmiut
- Point Harrison
- Great Whale River
- Belcher Island
- Wakeham Bay
- Tarramiut
- North Baffin
- Iglulik
- Grise Fiord
- Pond Inlet
- Clyde River
- Arctic Bay
- Resolute Bay
- Repulse Bay
- Rigolet
- South Baffin
- Cape Dorset
- Frobisher Bay
- Coral Harbour
- Labrador
- Chesterfield Inlet
- Aivilik
Victor Golla, Ives Goddard, Lyle Campbell, Marianne Mithun and Mauricio Mixco. 2008. "North America." In Atlas of the World's Languages, edited by Chris Moseley and Ron Asher. 7-41. Routledge.
Speaker Number Trend 1
Most members of the community or ethnic group speak the language. Speaker numbers may be decreasing, but very slowly.
Speakers
Location and Context
Inuktitut is the collective name for the dialects of Inuit (Eastern Eskimo) spoken on the northern coast of Canada, from the Mackenzie Delta in the west to Labrador in the east. (It is also sometimes used for Eastern Eskimo dialects in general, synonymous with Inuit.) The dialects of Western Canadian Inuktitut are usually distinguished from Eastern Canadian Inuktitut, the boundary falling between the Central Arctic coast and Baffin Island, but there is no sharp discontinuity. All of the Inuktitut speakers of the newly formed territory of Nunavut, which
encompasses dialects belonging to both the Western and Eastern divisions, can understand one another’s speech.