Kickapoo
[également appelé Kikapoo, Kikapú,]Classification : Algic
·menacée
Classification : Algic
·menacée
Kikapoo, Kikapú |
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Algic, Algonquian, Fox |
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ISO 639-3 |
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kic |
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En tant que csv |
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Recherche au sein de la communauté OLAC (Open Language Archives Community) |
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
Partly mutually intelligible with Sauk-Fox but has been spoken since the earliest contact in the seventeenth century by a separate political group.
There are estimated to be around 1,100 first-language speakers of Kickapoo, about 700 of them in Mexico, 400 in Oklahoma, and only a few in Kansas.
Now on reservations in Kansas and the Mexican state of Coahuila, and in communities near McLoud,
Oklahoma, and Eagle Pass, Texas.
Informations incomplètes “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press
Informations incomplètes “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
820 in United States (2000 census), decreasing. 6 monolinguals. Population total all countries: 1120.
Northeast Kansas, Horton; central Oklahoma, McCloud and Jones; Texas, Nuevo Nacimiento.
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, 19th Edition (2016)” . Lewis, M. Paul, Gary F. Simons, and Charles D. Fennig · SIL International
820?
US: 400 (Golla 2007), decreasing. Ethnic population: 820 (2000 census).
Mexico: 110 (2000 INALI).
English
Spanish
US: Kansas: Horton northeast; Oklahoma: Jones and McCloud; Texas: Nuevo Nacimiento.
Mexico: Coahuila state: Nacimiento de Kikapú, 40 km northeast of Muzquiz.