Palewyami

E376466

Palewyami is a now-extinct Native American language variety traditionally spoken by a Yokutsan-speaking group in California’s Central Valley.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Palewyami canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (32)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Native American language
Yokutsan language variety
extinct language
alignment nominative–accusative
associatedWith Central Valley indigenous communities
continent North America
country United States of America
surface form: United States
culturalContext traditional Yokuts culture of the San Joaquin Valley
documentation known primarily from limited field notes and comparative Yokutsan work
endangeredStatus extinct language (no native speakers)
ethnicGroup Yokuts people
extinctionCause language shift to English and Spanish
ISOStatus no individual ISO 639-3 code (grouped under Yokutsan varieties)
isPartOf Yokutsan languages
surface form: Yokutsan language family
languageBranch Southern Valley Yokuts
surface form: Valley Yokuts
languageFamily Yokutsan languages
languageFamilyHigher proposed Yok-Utian (controversial)
languageTypology agglutinative language
morphology rich verbal morphology
suffixing morphology
phonologicalFeature contrastive vowel length (reconstructed for Yokutsan)
rich consonant inventory (typical of Yokutsan)
region Central Valley
surface form: California's Central Valley
relatedTo Choynimni
Chukchansi
Tachi
Yokuts
spokenIn California, United States
surface form: California
status extinct
traditionalTerritory San Joaquin Valley
surface form: southern San Joaquin Valley
wordOrder SOV-dominant
writingSystem Latin alphabet
surface form: Latin script

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

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

Yokutsan languages hasDialect Palewyami