Winnebago
[también conocido como Ho-Chunk, Hocak Wazijaci, Hocák]Clasificación: Siouan
·en peligro de extinción
Clasificación: Siouan
·en peligro de extinción
Ho-Chunk, Hocak Wazijaci, Hocák, Hocank, Hochank, Hock, Hochunk, Hocangara, Hotcangara |
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Siouan, Mississippi Valley Siouan, Chiwere-Winnebago |
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ISO 639-3 |
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win |
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Como csv |
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La información está incompleta “North America” (7-41) . Victor Golla and Ives Goddard and Lyle Campbell and Marianne Mithun and Mauricio Mixco (2008) , Chris Moseley and Ron Asher · Routledge
Winnebago has over 250 fluent first-language speakers, divided between the Winnebago Tribe of northeastern Nebraska and the Ho-Chunk Nation of central Wisconsin. The number may be higher; 2,000 speakers were reported by reliable sources in 1980.
Winnebago Tribe of northeastern Nebraska and the Ho-Chunk Nation of central Wisconsin.
La información está incompleta “North America” (1-96) . Victor Golla (2007) , C. Moseley · London & New York: Routledge
There is an unpublished dictionary (Golla 2007:91)
La información está incompleta “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
6,000
Speaker number data: (2004). 230 reported in 1997 (V. Zeps 1997). Ethnic population: data: (V. Zeps 1995). 822 enrolled in Nebraska (1968 BIA 1968).
(250 (Golla 2007) [2016.)
Central Wisconsin scattered; eastern Nebraska, Winnebago Reservation; in Iowa, south of Sioux City, east bank, Missouri River.
La información está incompleta “Endangered Languages of the United States” (108-130) . Christopher Rogers, Naomi Palosaari and Lyle Campbell (2010) , Christopher Moseley · UNESCO
La información está incompleta “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press