Karkin Language (krb)

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Description:

Karkin (also called Los Carquines in Spanish) is a name of one sub-group of the indigenous Ohlone people of California, as well as the name of the language they spoke. Karkin (Los Carquines) is a language within the Ohlone/Costanoan sub-family of the Utian language language family. It was spoken in Northern California by one local tribal group of the Ohlone who lived in the Carquinez Strait region in the northeast portion of the San Francisco Bay estuary. Its only documentation is a single vocabulary obtained by linguist-missionary Felipe Arroyo de la Cuesta at Mission Dolores in 1821. Although meager, the records of Karkin show that it constituted a distinct branch of Costanoan, strikingly different from the neighboring Chochenyo Ohlone language and other Ohlone languages spoken farther south. Karkin has probably not been spoken since the nineteenth century.

All Costanoan languages went extinct, but some are being studied and revived...... full article at Wikipedia

Location of Karkin Language Speakers

http://llmap.org/languages/krb/static_map.png?width=400&height=300&kilroywashere=.png

Overview

Main Country: United States
Spoken In:

Regions: Americas

ISO 639-3 Code: krb

Classification Taxonomy

All Languages

  Penutian Group

    Yok-Utian Group

      Utian Group

        Costanoan Group

          Karkin Language