Skip to content
Category

Language articles without reference field

page 3
Sarawak Malay
Malaysian Malay dialect
Wiradjuri
traditional language of the Wiradjuri people of Australia
Acolapissa
The Acolapissa were a small tribe of Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands of North America. They lived along the banks of the Pearl River, between present-day Louisiana and Mississippi. They are believed to have spoken a Muskogean language, closely related to the Choctaw and Chickasaw spoken by other Southeast tribes of the Muskogean family.
Fiteny Antankarana
Western Malagasy language
Aribwatsa
language
Warrgamay
Australian Aboriginal language
Malaccan Creole Malay
creole spoken by the descendents of Tamil merchants
Falkland Islands English
variety of the English language
Samaná English
variety of the English language spoken in the Samaná Peninsula, Dominican Republic
Royasc
Royasc is a dialect bridging the gap between the Ligurian language and the Occitan language. It is spoken in Italy and France.
Hokaglish
Hokaglish (; ; Tâi-lô: sann-lām-tsham-uē; ), formally known as Philippine Hybrid Hokkien, is a spoken language formed from contact primarily from Philippine Hokkien, Tagalog and Philippine English, with some influence from Philippine Spanish, Cantonese, and other local peripheral languages.
Kuo
language
Arabi Malayalam
language spoken in Kerala, Lakshadweep, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu of India
Jumli Khas
Language of Nepal
Texas Silesian
dialect of the Silesian language used by Texas Silesians in U.S. settlements
Bhaca
Bantu language of South Africa
Shakori
thumb|right|alt=Photograph of river|The Shakori, and the related Eno, lived along the banks of the Eno River in the vicinity of modern-day Hillsborough, North Carolina The Shakori were an Indigenous people of the Southeastern Woodlands. They were thought to be a Siouan people, closely allied with other nearby tribes such as the Eno and the Sissipahaw. As their name is also recorded as Shaccoree, they may be the same as the Sugaree, as both are Catawba people.
Thēthi
Thēthi, also known as Thēth, Thethiya, Thenthi, or Thati, is a Maithili dialect, mainly spoken in the Mithila region of India and Nepal. It is spoken mainly in Munger divisions and Kosi Division of Bihar, India and in Koshi Province of Nepal. It has speakers in India according to the 2011 census.
Judaeo-Papiamento
Judaeo-Papiamento, or Jewish Papiamentu, is an endangered Jewish language and an ethnolect of Papiamento spoken by the Sephardic Jewish community of Curaçao in the Dutch Caribbean. It is likely the only living Jewish ethnolect based on a creole language and the only one based on a language native to the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
Old French Sign Language
attested sign language
Bhumij
Austroasiatic language of India
Sammarinese dialect
Dialect of Romagnol spoken in San Marino
Central Taurus Sign Language
Deaf sign language of Turkey
Urakhi dialect
dialect of North Dargwa
Ngwii
language of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Yahadian
language
Patagonian Afrikaans
Patagonian Afrikaans is a form of Afrikaans brought to Argentina by Boer immigrants after the Second Boer War (1899–1902)
Junjiahua
Junjiahua, Junhua, Junsheng, or "military speech" in English, is any of a number of isolated dialects in Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Fujian, and Taiwan. Some believe that they are a Mandarin dialect group that assimilated to local Chinese variants in southern China. Junhua began as a lingua franca in the army, being spoken between soldiers dispatched to various parts of China during the Ming dynasty. It was subsequently spread to areas around the camps where the army settled. It is now an endangered language. In Hainan, it is still spoken by about 100,000 people. These speakers mainly live in
Edolo
Papuan language of Papua New Guinea
Billy Ray Waldon
American fugitive
Purubora
language
Ferrarase dialect
ferrarese Dialect Language
Bönnsch
Ripuarian dialect of German; spoken in Bonn and bordering municipalities
Larantuka Malay
Malay-based creole language
Iyaric
Iyaric, also called Dread Talk or Rasta Talk, is a form of language constructed by members of the Rastafari movement through alteration of vocabulary. When Africans were taken into captivity as a part of the slave trade, English was imposed as a colonial language. In defiance, the Rastafari movement created a modified English vocabulary and dialect, with the aim of liberating their language from its history as a tool of colonial oppression. Iyaric sometimes also plays a liturgical role among Rastas, in addition to Amharic and Ge'ez.
Malvani Konkani
dialect of Konkani
Tver Karelian
dialect of Karelian
Sidi
Bantu language of Pakistan and India
Fiuman dialect
venetian dialect of Rijeka, Croatia
Bangkok Malay
Malay dialect in Thailand
Kuruáya
language
Alasha
Mongolic variety of Inner Mongolia, China
Modern Palestinian Judeo-Arabic
Variety of Arabic
Northern Tutchone
language
Pella Dutch
language
Weitou dialect
language
Surinamese Dutch
Dutch spoken in Suriname
Montfortian
Limburgish dialect
Tansi
mixed language in Indonesia
Sant Bhasha
language composed of vocabulary common to northern Indian languages, used in Sikh scripture
Cholanaikkan
Dravidian language of India
Singapore Sign Language
sign language used in Singapore
Sathmar Swabian
Upper Swabian dialect of Satu Mare, Romania
Glasgow patter
Scots dialect spoken in and around Glasgow, Scotland
Narango
language
Tangam
Sino-Tibetan language of North-East India
Nyangia
nearly extinct Kuliak language
Chengdu-Chongqing dialect
variety of Mandarin Chinese
Nokuku
language
Cauchois
Norman dialect