Timucua language

E947464

The Timucua language was an extinct indigenous language once spoken by the Timucua people of northern Florida and southeastern Georgia, known primarily from early colonial-era missionary texts.

Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf extinct language
indigenous language of the Americas
language
associatedReligionDuringDocumentation Roman Catholicism GENERATED
associatedWith Spanish missions in Florida
country United States of America
surface form: United States
culturalArea Southeastern Woodlands NERFINISHED
documentedBy Francisco Pareja NERFINISHED
Spanish Franciscan missionaries
era Spanish colonial era
pre-Columbian era
ethnicGroup Timucua people NERFINISHED
extinctionStatus extinct
geographicDistribution Apalachee region margins
Atlantic coast of northern Florida
St. Johns River region NERFINISHED
glottocode timu1245
hasDialects Acquera dialect
Agua Dulce dialect NERFINISHED
Ibi dialect
Itafi dialect
Mocama dialect NERFINISHED
Potano dialect
Tucururu dialect
Yustega dialect NERFINISHED
influenceFrom Spanish language
ISO639-3 tjm
languageFamily language isolate
linguisticTypology agglutinative language
loanwordsFrom Spanish language
morphology polysynthetic tendencies
primarySources catechisms
confessionals
grammars
missionary texts
religious texts
region Southern United States
surface form: Southeastern United States
religiousTextsInclude Christian doctrine
confession manuals
sermons
spokenIn northern Florida
southeastern Georgia
statusInLinguistics poorly attested
subject of historical linguistic study
timeDepthOfDocumentation early 17th century
usedFor evangelization by Spanish missionaries
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.

Potano language Timucua language
Timucua language Timucua language