Category
page 7Languages without Glottolog code
Uummarmiutun
Uummarmiutun (), Uummaġmiutun or Canadian Iñupiaq is the variant of Iñupiaq (or Inuvialuktun) spoken by the Uummarmiut, part of the Inuvialuit, who live mainly in the communities of Inuvik and Aklavik in the Northwest Territories of Canada.
Lapine
fictional language
Penang Hokkien
southern Min Chinese dialect spoken in Malaysia
Kitara
language derived from a combination of Runyoro, Rukiga, Runyankole and Rotooro.
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
Pascagoula
The Pascagoula (also Pascoboula, Pacha-Ogoula, Pascagola, Pascaboula, Paskaguna) were an indigenous group living in coastal Mississippi on the Pascagoula River.
Pretoria Sotho
lingua franca of Pretoria and the Tshwane
Pasilingua
thumb|The cover of the first edition of Pasilingua
Pasilingua is an international auxiliary language proposed by Paul Steiner, first published in Neuwied in 1885 in his book Three World Language Systems (German: Drei Weltsprach-Systeme).
Ulster English
variety of English spoken in Northern Ireland
Franco-Italian
Franco-Italian, also known as Franco-Venetian or Franco-Lombard, in Italy as lingua franco-veneta "Franco-Venetan language", was a literary language used in parts of northern Italy, from the mid-13th century to into the 15th century. It was employed by writers including Brunetto Latini and Rustichello da Pisa and was presumably only a written language, and not a spoken one.
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.
Kuwaiti Persian
persian variety historically spoken in Kuwait
Ferrarase dialect
ferrarese Dialect Language
Armazic
extinct written Aramaic language
Wila'
language
Habla Congo
liturgical language of the Palo religion
Sudanese sign languages
Sign languages of Sudan and South Sudan
Juk
Austroasiatic language spoken in Laos
Parmigiano dialect
dialect of Emilian Romagna spoken in Parma and province
Northern Ireland Sign Language
sign language used mainly by deaf people in Northern Ireland
Danzhou dialect
language
Cremunés
dialect
Occitan whistled from Aas
whistled speech variation of Occitan, practiced in the Aas village, France
Belter Creole
constructed language created by Nick Farmer for The Expanse
Sidi
Bantu language of Pakistan and India
Hecho Aragonese
dialect of Aragonese
Cornish English
English dialect spoken in Cornwall
Gutian dialect
dialect of Mindong dialect, which is popular in Gutian County, Ningde City, Fujian Province
Khmer Khe dialect
Khmer dialect of northeastern Cambodia
Paḷḷuezu
dialect of Asturian-Leonese
Bororo of Cabaçal
extinct language of Brazil
Jelkung
language
Doolboong
language
Universal
constructed language based on Esperanto
Itzgründisch
East Franconian dialect of Germany
Maojia
mixed language of Southern China
Xiximes
The Xixime were an indigenous people who inhabited a portion of the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains in the present day states of Durango and Sinaloa, Mexico. The Xixime are noted for their reported practice of cannibalism and resistance to Spanish colonization in the form of the Xixime Rebellion of 1610.
Singaporean Hokkien
minnan Chinese language spoken in Singapore
Trukhmen
Turkmen dialect spoken in Stavropol region, Russia
Jie
extinct language
Thmon
language
Galwegian Gaelic
extinct dialect of the Gaelic language
Northern Borderlands dialect
dialect of Polish language
Panamane
Panamane [panaˈman] is a constructed language created by the Panamanian Manuel E. Amador in 1922 and compiled in a book titled Fundaments of Panamane: Universal Language in 1936.
Salvadoran Spanish
Spanish spoken and written in El Salvador
Aisinian Aragonese
dialect of Aragonese
Unish
Unish is a constructed language developed by a research team at Sejong University, South Korea. The term “Unish” is used in reference to it being cast as a universal language in the globalized era.
Siberian Russian dialects
group of Northern Russian dialects
new mixed dialects
group of dialects of the Polish language
Judeo-Egyptian Arabic
language
Quang Lam
language
Quinipissa
The Quinipissa (sometimes spelled Kinipissa in French sources) were an Indigenous people of the Southeastern Woodlands who were living on the lower Mississippi River, in present-day Louisiana, as reported by René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle in 1682.
Dominican Creole French
French-based creole, which is the generally spoken language in Dominica
Peräpohjola dialects
group of dialects of Finnish
Bamboo English
English-based pidgin created with inception of jargon of American soldiers in Japan and Korea
Kuwani
language in Papua
Fuqing dialect
It is spoken in the county-level city of Fuqing, situated within the prefecture-level city of Fuzhou.
Kasong
language
Haflong Hindi
lingua franca of Dima Hasao district in Assam
Weitou dialect
language