Osage
[aka Wazhazhe ie,]Classification: Siouan
·awakening
Classification: Siouan
·awakening
Wazhazhe ie, |
||
Siouan, Mississippi Valley Siouan, Dhegihan |
||
ISO 639-3 |
||
osa |
||
As csv |
||
Information from: “Language Department” . The Osage Nation
"Due to the efforts of our previous tribal council and new Constitutional government, we are on the road to preservation and revitalization. In the fall of 2003, the council created the Osage Language Program and hired Mongrain Lookout as the director.
Their efforts have proven successful. We currently have five advanced student who have made tremendous progress toward fluency and approximately 300 currently enrolled in the tribal program classes."
"We will continue to make an aggressive effort to revitalize the Osage language. Because of what we have experienced so far, we know that it can be done."
Information from: “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 18th Edition” . Lewis, M. Paul, Gary F. Simons, and Charles D. Fennig · SIL International
11,000
many
(Golla 2007.)
(Unchanged 2016.)
North central Oklahoma.
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
are a number of semi-speakers and second language speakers.
all over 65
English
Oklahoma
Northeastern corner of Oklahoma, around Pawhuska
Information from: “Endangered Languages of the United States” (108-130) . Christopher Rogers, Naomi Palosaari and Lyle Campbell (2010) , Christopher Moseley · UNESCO
Oklahoma
Information from: “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press