Alabama–Coushatta language

E1003609

The Alabama–Coushatta language is a Native American Muskogean language traditionally spoken by the Alabama and Coushatta peoples of the southeastern United States, now primarily in Texas.

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Observed surface forms (1)

Surface form Occurrences
Coushatta language 1

Statements (39)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Muskogean language
Native American language
endangered language
associatedTribe Alabama–Coushatta Tribe of Texas NERFINISHED
closelyRelatedTo Chickasaw language NERFINISHED
Choctaw language NERFINISHED
Creek language NERFINISHED
Koasati language NERFINISHED
Mikasuki language NERFINISHED
culturalRole ceremonial language
identity marker for Alabama and Coushatta peoples
glottocode alab1236
hasAlternateName Alabama language NERFINISHED
Alabama–Koasati NERFINISHED
Alibamu language NERFINISHED
hasDialect Alabama language NERFINISHED
Coushatta language NERFINISHED
hasEthnologueEntry Ethnologue: Alabama (akz) NERFINISHED
hasPhonologicalFeature contrastive vowel length
nasal vowels
rich consonant inventory
historicallySpokenIn Alabama NERFINISHED
Louisiana NERFINISHED
ISO639-3Code akz
languageFamily Muskogean languages NERFINISHED
region Deep South NERFINISHED
revitalizationEfforts community language classes
documentation projects
spokenBy Alabama people NERFINISHED
Coushatta people NERFINISHED
spokenIn Texas NERFINISHED
United States of America
surface form: United States

southeastern United States
status severely endangered
subfamilyOf Eastern Muskogean languages NERFINISHED
typology agglutinative language
usedBy Alabama–Coushatta Tribe of Texas NERFINISHED
wordOrder SOV-dominant
writingSystem Latin alphabet
surface form: Latin script

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Alabama language hasAlternateName Alabama–Coushatta language
Koasati language hasAlternativeName Alabama–Coushatta language
this entity surface form: Coushatta language