- The
Chimakuan languages are a
group of
extinct languages that were
spoken in
northwestern Washington state,
United States, on the
Olympic Peninsula. They...
-
hypothetical language family consisting of the Salishan, Wakashan, and
Chimakuan languages of the
Pacific Northwest region of
North America. It was proposed...
- the
Tanoan languages, the
lexical affixes of the Wakashan,
Salishan and
Chimakuan languages, and the
unusual verb
structure of Na-Dené. The classification...
- (1.5678 sq mi, or 1,003.4 acres). The
Quileute language belongs to the
Chimakuan family of
languages among Northwest Coast indigenous peoples. The Quileute...
-
suggested that the
Salishan languages might be
related to the
Wakashan and
Chimakuan languages in a
hypothetical Mosan family. This
proposal persists primarily...
- (/ˈtʃɛməkʌm/ CHEM-ək-um; also
written as
Chimakum or Chima****) is an
extinct Chimakuan language once
spoken by the Chemakum, a
Native American group that once...
- for case. The
linguistic area is
centered on the Salishan,
Wakashan and
Chimakuan families. Some
features are also
shared with Tsimshianic,
Chinookan and...
- as
Quillayute /kwɪˈleɪjuːt/, is an
extinct language, and was the last
Chimakuan language,
spoken natively until the end of the 20th
century by Quileute...
-
Lexical affixes are
relatively rare and are used in Wakashan, Salishan, and
Chimakuan languages — the
presence of
these is an
areal feature of the
Pacific Northwest...
- (Ritwan)
Kutenai (also
known as Kootenay; a
language isolate)
Mosan Wakashan Chimakuan Salishan Kutenai may
possibly be
distantly related to the
Salishan family...