Kumeyaay language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Kumeyaay, Southern Diegueño 'Iipay aa |
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|---|---|---|
| Spoken in: | USA | |
| Region: | California, Baja California | |
| Total speakers: | 110 in the US (2000), 220 in Mexico (1991) | |
| Language family: | Hokan Esselen-Yuman Yuman Delta-California Yuman Kumeyaay, Southern Diegueño |
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| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1: | none | |
| ISO 639-2: | – | |
| ISO 639-3: | dih | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
Kumeyaay, also known as Southern Diegueño, Kamia, and Campo, is the Native American language spoken by the Kumeyaay people of southern San Diego and Imperial counties in California, as well as in portions of northern Baja California. Hinton (1994:28) suggested a conservative estimate of 50 surviving Kumeyaay speakers. A more liberal estimate (including all Diegueno speakers), supported by the results of the Census 2000, is 110 people in the US, including 15 persons under the age of 18.
Kumeyaay belongs to the Yuman-Cochimí linguistic family and to the Delta-California branch of that family. Kumeyaay and its neighbors, Ipai to the north and Tipai to the south, were often considered to be dialects of a single Diegueño language, but the current consensus among linguists seem to be that at least three distinct languages are present within the dialect chain (e.g., Langdon 1990). Confusingly, Kumeyaay is commonly used as a designation both for the central language of this family and for the Ipai-Kumeyaay-Tipai people as a whole. Tipai is also commonly used as a collective designation for speakers of both Kumeyaay and Tipai proper.
Published documentation for the Kumeyaay language appears to be limited to a few texts (cf. Mithun 1999:578).
[edit] References
- Leanne Hinton. 1994. Flutes of Fire: Essays on California Indian Languages. Heyday Books, Berkeley, California.
- Langdon, Margaret. 1990. "Diegueño: how many languages?" In Proceedings of the 1990 Hokan-Penutian Languages Workshop, edited by James E. Redden, pp. 184-190. University of Southern Illinois, Carbondale.
- Mithun, Marianne. 1999. The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge University Press.

