Category
page 4Language articles with Linglist code
Talossa
Talossa, also known as the Kingdom of Talossa ( ), is one of the earliest micronationsfounded in 1979 by then-14-year-old Robert Ben Madison of Milwaukee and at first confined to his bedroom; he adopted the name after discovering that the word means "inside the house" in Finnish. Among the first such projects still maintained, it has kept up a web presence since 1995. Its internet and media exposure since the late 1990s contributed to the appearance of other subsequent internet micronations.
Old Georgian
literary language of Georgian monarchies in the 5th century
Eteocypriot
language
Vivaro-Alpine
dialect of Occitan

Hernici
The Hernici were an Italic tribe of ancient Italy, whose territory was in Latium between the Fucine Lake and the Sacco River (Trerus), bounded by the Volsci on the south, and by the Aequi and the Marsi on the north.
Old Nubian
ancient variety of the Nubian language
Aka-Bea
The Bea language, Aka-Bea, also called Bojigyab, is an extinct Great Andamanese language of the Southern group. It was spoken around the western Andaman Strait and around the northern and western coast of South Andaman. It was well documented in the late 19th century, but died out in the 1920s. The term was used both to name the language and the people who spoke it, derived from the prefix , used to name objects related to the tongue, and , meaning 'spring-water'.
Nabataean Aramaic
extinct language
Minoan
language of Minoan culture
Primitive Irish
pre-6th century Goidelic Celtic language of Ireland and Britain
Rushani
Pamir language of Afghanistan and Tajikistan
Galindian
language
African Romance
extinct Romance language
Massachusett
Algonquian language spoken by indigenous communities in the United States
Babuza
language
Old Uyghur
extinct Turkic language
Scanian
dialect
Basay
extinct Formosan language of northern Taiwan
Old Welsh
old form of Welsh: a Brythonic, Insular Celtic language
Maharashtri
language of ancient and medieval India which is the ancestor of Marathi and Konkani
Caucasian Albanian
language
Palembang
Malayic variety spoken in southern Sumatra
Kott
extinct Yeniseian language that was formerly spoken in central Siberia by the banks of Mana River, a tributary of the Yenisei river
Old Korean
earliest attested form of the Korean language
Paleohispanic
languages of the Pre-Roman non-Greek peoples of the Iberian Peninsula
Volscian
language
Milyan
language
Sidetic
language
Banat Bulgarian
dialect
Sened
language
South Picene
ancient Italic language
Old Swedish
North Germanic language
Yana
extinct language
Sicel
Siculian (or Sicel) is an extinct Indo-European language spoken in central and eastern Sicily by the Sicels. It is attested in fewer than thirty inscriptions in eastern Sicily from the late 6th century to 4th century BCE, and in around twenty-five glosses from ancient writers.
Middle Welsh
Celtic language of the High Middle Ages
Khorezmian Turkic
literary Turkic language of the medieval Golden Horde of Central Asia and Eastern Europe
Beothuk
extinct language of the Beothuk people
Gandhari
Middle Indic language of Gāndhāra attested in the Dharmapada
Pyu
language of Myanmar
Goguryeo
speculated language of ancient Goguryeo
Ayoreo
language
North Picene
Ancient language of the Italian Peninsula
Ardhamagadhi Prakrit
Middle Indo-Aryan language of India
Aka-Kora
Akakhora, or Kora (Cora), is an extinct dialect of the Northern Andamanese language. It was spoken on the northeast and north central coasts of North Andaman and on Smith Island.
Paisachi
Paishachi or Paisaci () is a largely unattested literary language of the middle kingdoms of India mentioned in Prakrit and Sanskrit grammars of antiquity. It is generally grouped with the Prakrits, with which it shares some linguistic similarities, but is still not considered a spoken Prakrit by the grammarians because it was purely a literary language, and because of its archaicism.
Camunic
language
Hong Kong Cantonese
dialect native to Hong Kong
Asa
Cushitic language
Old Anatolian Turkish
form of the Turkish language spoken in Anatolia from the 11th to 15th centuries
Old Tibetan
language written between late 7th century & early 11th Century, CE
Palmyrene Aramaic
Western Aramaic dialect spoken in the city of Palmyra in the early centuries AD
Osage
language
Sac-Fox-Kickapoo
Algonquian language spoken in US Midwest and northern Mexico
Middle Korean
form of the Korean language used between the 10th to 16th centuries (Goryeo to mid-Joseon)
Middle Armenian
language of the second period in written Armenian
Northeastern Mandarin
dialect of Mandarin spoken in Northeastern China
Karakhanid
Historical Turkic language
Skalvians
thumb|The Skalvians in the context of the other Baltic tribes, Common Era|CE. The Eastern Balts are shown in brown hues while the Western Balts are shown in green. The boundaries are approximate.
The Scalovians (; ), also known as the Skalvians, Schalwen and Schalmen, were a Baltic tribe related to the Prussians. According to the Chronicon terrae Prussiae of Peter of Dusburg, the now extinct Scalovians inhabited the land of Scalovia south of the Curonians and Samogitians, by the lower Neman River ca. 1240.
Mocho’
Mayan language
Kalinago
Arawakan language spoken by the Kalinago of the Lesser Antilles