Informationen von: “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 18th Edition” . Lewis, M. Paul, Gary F. Simons, and Charles D. Fennig · SIL International
Format
0
"No known L1 speakers. Last speakers previously reportedly died about 1930. Considered extinct but 1990 census lists 12 speakers (Adelaar 2007)."
Skripte (Schreibsysteme und Orthografien)
none
ORTE
Mexico;
ORTSBESCHREIBUNG
"Sonora, Nacori, Bacanora, Suaqui, Sahuaripa, Arivechi, and Onavas. Tecoripa is the traditional area."
Informationen von: “Opata Language” .
15? or extinct?
Opata was believed to be dead already in 1930, and Carl Sofus Lumholtz reported the Opata to have become "Mexicanized" and lost their language and customs already when traveling through Sonora in the 1890s, but in a recent (1993) survey by the Instituto Nacional Indigenista 15 people in the Mexican Federal District self-identified as speakers of Ópata – this may not mean however that the language is actually living, since linguistic nomenclature in Mexico is notoriously fuzzy. And no studies documenting the language spoken by those 15 persons have been published. If the 15 were in fact speakers of Ópata then the language is severely endangered and if not it is probably already extinct. Sometimes Eudeve and Opata are considered distinct languages and sometimes merely dialects of one single language.
ORTE
Mexico
ORTSBESCHREIBUNG
North central Sonora.
Informationen von: “World Oral Literature Project” .
Stark gefährdet
20 percent certain, based on the evidence available
15
Informationen von: “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press