Hoh language

E845547

The Hoh language is an extinct Native American language of the Pacific Northwest, traditionally spoken by the Hoh people of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Hoh language canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (29)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Native American language
Pacific Northwest Coast language
extinct language
associatedPeople Hoh Tribe of Washington NERFINISHED
closelyRelatedTo Quileute language NERFINISHED
continent North America
country United States of America
surface form: United States
culturalRegion Northwest Coast cultural area NERFINISHED
documentedBy American linguists of the 20th century (collectively)
documentedIn linguistic field notes
endangeredStatus extinct language
ethnicGroup Hoh people NERFINISHED
extinctionCause colonial assimilation policies
language shift to English
hasWritingSystem Latin script (for linguistic documentation)
ISOStatus no ISO 639-3 code assigned (as of 2024)
isPartOf Chimakuan language family NERFINISHED
languageFamily Chimakuan languages NERFINISHED
linguisticTypology polysynthetic language (family-typical)
region Olympic Peninsula NERFINISHED
spokenBy Hoh people NERFINISHED
state Washington
status extinct
traditionalTerritory Hoh River area NERFINISHED
Pacific Northwest NERFINISHED
usedFor ceremonial speech
daily communication (historically)
oral tradition
traditional stories

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

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

Hoh people originalLanguage Hoh language