Assiniboine
[également appelé Assiniboin, Stoney, Hohe]Classification : Siouan
·en danger
Classification : Siouan
·en danger
Assiniboin, Stoney, Hohe, Assinaboin, Nakon |
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Siouan, Mississippi Valley Siouan, Dakota |
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ISO 639-3 |
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asb |
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En tant que csv |
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Recherche au sein de la communauté OLAC (Open Language Archives Community) |
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Informations incomplètes “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
3,500
None under 40 and most elderly.
Dakotan is a Siouan dialect complex, with three well defined dialect areas: Stoney, currently spoken in southwestern Alberta; Assinibone, in southern Saskatchewan and northern Montana; and Sioux, spoken widely in North and South Dakota, Minnesota, and in southern Manitoba and Saskatchewan. Intelligibility between these dialect areas is low, although speakers can communicate after a while with some difficulty, and they are perhaps best considered emergent languages.
Spoken on two reservations in Montana—Fort Belknap and Fort Peck—and on three reserves in Saskatchewan—Whitebear, Carry the Kettle, and Mosquito-Grizzly Bear’s Head.
Informations incomplètes “Encyclopedia of the World's Endangered Languages” . Christopher Moseley (2007) Routledge
English
Cree
Courses in Assiniboine are taught at Fort Belknap Community College.
Informations incomplètes “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 19th Edition (2016)” . Lewis, M. Paul, Gary F. Simons, and Charles D. Fennig · SIL International
English
Canada: Saskatchewan province: part of Carry-the-Kettle, Mosquito-Grizzly Bear’s Head, and Whitebear.
USA, Montana: Fort Belknap and Fort Peck reservations.
Informations incomplètes “Endangered Languages of the United States” (108-130) . Christopher Rogers, Naomi Palosaari and Lyle Campbell (2010) , Christopher Moseley · UNESCO
Informations incomplètes “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
5000
There are 250 speakers in Canada. Data for the number of speakers and the ethnic population comes from D. Parks (1997).
West central and southeast Saskatchewan (Mosquito-Grizzly Bear’s Head), south Saskatchewan (part of Carry-the-Kettle and Whitebear).
West central and southeast Saskatchewan (Mosquito-Grizzly Bear’s Head), south Saskatchewan (part of Carry-the-Kettle and Whitebear).