Information from: “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
Endangered
80 percent certain, based on the evidence available
580
1,065
Bearlake is an emergent Athabaskan language within the North Slavey group of Slavey dialects of the Dene complex. It is spoken as a first language by about 580 people (450 of whom use it actively at home) in two communities in the Northwest Territories, Déline, formerly Fort Franklin (460 speakers out of a total population of 615), and Tulita, formerly Fort Norman (up to 120 speakers out of 450 total). At Déline, Bearlake is the lingua franca of a dialectally mixed community and many speakers are also fluent in Dogrib. At Tulita, an unknown number of the speakers of Bearlake are also fluent (or primarily fluent) in Mountain.
DATE OF INFO
2008?
SPEAKER NUMBER TRENDS
TRANSMISSION
PLACES
Northwest Territories
LOCATION DESCRIPTION
Two communities in the Northwest Territories, Déline, formerly Fort Franklin, and Tulita, formerly Fort Norman.
Information from: “Encyclopedia of the World's Endangered Languages” . Christopher Moseley (2007) Routledge
Endangered
100 percent certain, based on the evidence available
580
1065
DOMAINS OF USE
SPEAKER NUMBER TRENDS
TRANSMISSION
OTHER LANGUAGES USED BY THE COMMUNITY
Dogrib
Mountain
PLACES
The Northwest Territories
LOCATION DESCRIPTION
Spoken at Déline (formerly Fort Franklin) and Tulita (formerly Fort Norman).
Information from: “Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger” . Christopher Moseley (ed.) (2010) UNESCO Publishing