Inuktitut
Also Known As:
ᐃᓄᒃᑎᑐᑦ, Inuit, Eastern Arctic Eskimo, Eastern Canadian Eskimo
Dialects & Varieties
  • 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
Inuktitut

Language Information by Source

North America

Golla, Victor. 2007. "North America." In Encyclopedia of the World's Endangered Languages, edited by C. Moseley. 1-96. London & New York: Routledge.

Speakers

Native or fluent speakers:
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Second-language speakers and learners
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Semi-speakers or rememberers
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Children:
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Young adults
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Older adults
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Elders
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Ethnic or community population
31,000
Year information was gathered
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Comments on speakers
Since the establishment of Nunavut as a preponderantly aboriginal territory within Canada in 1999, Inuktitut has enjoyed official status in that jurisdiction. It is government policy to insure that Inuktitut is used in all public offices and is taught from grades K to 12 in all Nunavut schools. The government of Nunavut also offers Inuktitut language classes to new employees from other parts of the country.

Location and Context

Countries
Canada;
Location Description
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Government Support
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Institutional Support
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Speakers' Attitude
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Other Languages Used By The Community
None
Number of Other Language Speakers:
None
Domains of Other Languages:
None

Writing Systems

Standard orthography:
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Writing system:
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Other writing systems used:
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Comments on writing systems:
A syllabic writing system, introduced by Anglican missionaries in the late nineteenth century and modeled on the syllabary earlier developed for Cree, is now the preferred writing of Inuktitut in much of the central Canadian area, with a roman orthography in common use only in Labrador and from Cambridge Bay westward. In Nunavut, the Inuinnaqtun dialect of the western Kitikmeot region is written in a roman orthography, while in the rest of the territory syllabics are used, and this distinction more than phonological or lexical dialect differences is the principal obstacle to standardization.

Literacy is high, both in roman and syllabic orthographies.

Community Members