Esselen language

The name was recorded by Felipe Arroyo de la Cuesta on May 18, 1832 at Soledad Mission from his informant Eusebio (native name Sutasis) (cf.About 350 words and phrases and a few complete sentences have been preserved in literature,[2] including a short bilingual catechism (for a summary see Mithun 1999:411–413 and Golla 2011:114).By the beginning of the 20th century the only data on Esselen that investigators such as Kroeber and Harrington could collect were a few words remembered by speakers of other Indian languages in the area.[citation needed] H. W. Henshaw thought that Esselen represented a monotypic linguistic family.[4] Breschini and Haversat (1994: 82-88) give the following numbers of villages and population estimates for each of the five Esselen tribes.
ISO 639 codeUnited StatesBig SurCaliforniaEsselenExtinctRevivalLanguage familyISO 639-3Linguist ListGlottologCentral Coast of CaliforniaMontereylanguage isolateFelipe Arroyo de la CuestaSoledad MissionDionisio Alcalá GalianoLapérouseMission CarmelKroeberHarringtonH. W. HenshawChumashan languagesArroyoMission SoledadArroyo SecoCarmel ValleyGreenfieldSanta Lucia MountainsSound correspondencesLabialAlveolarRetroflexPalatalGlottalPlosiveAffricateFricativeRhoticApproximantClose-midAlfred L. Kroeberground squirrelmountain lionpinolecottontailGolla, VictorMithun, MarianneWiktionarySurvey of California and Other Indian LanguagesWayback MachineLanguages of CaliforniaIndigenousAthabaskanTolowaMattoleWailakiChumashanObispeñoCruzeñoPurisimeñoIneseñoBarbareñoVentureñoOhloneKarkinChochenyoRamaytushTamyenAwaswasMutsunRumsenChalonChimarikoAchomawiAtsugewiNortheastern PomoEastern PomoSoutheastern PomoNorthern PomoCentral PomoSouthern PomoKashayaMojaveKumeyaayPenutianKlamath-ModocYokutsBuena Vista YokutsGashowu YokutsKings River YokutsPalewyamiTule–Kaweah YokutsValley YokutsBay MiwokCoast MiwokLake MiwokPlains MiwokCentral Sierra MiwokNorthern Sierra MiwokSouthern Sierra MiwokMaiduanKonkowNisenanShastanKonomihuNew River ShastaOkwanuchuShastaUto AztecanCahuillaCupeñoKawaiisuKitanemukLuiseño-JuaneñoNorthern PaiutePanamintSerranoTataviamTongvaTübatulabalWintuanNomlakiPatwinSouthern PatwinYukianSalinanTakelmaPlains Sign TalkAmerican EnglishCalifornia EnglishChicano EnglishCalifornian SpanishArmenianPersianPunjabiRussianChineseKoreanTagalogVietnameseSign languageAmerican Sign LanguageHokan languagesPalaihnihanAchumawiPomoanCochimíKiliwaCocopahMaricopaQuechanPaipaiUpland YumanHualapai dialectHavasupai dialectYavapaiPakawanCoahuiltecoCotonameComecrudanComecrudoMamuliqueTequistlatecanHuamelultecTequistlatecHighland Oaxaca ChontalJicaqueanWestern Jicaqueextinct languagesIndigenous language families and isolatesNorth AmericaYuki–WappoBeothukCayuseKutenaiTimucuaWaikuriPericúEskaleutEskimoanNa-DeneTlingitAlgonquianSalishanWakashanChimakuanMacro-SiouanSiouanCaddoanIroquoianChinookanYok-UtianTsimshianicPlateauKlamathMolalaSahaptianCoast OregonAlseanCoosanSiuslawTakelma–KalapuyanKalapuyanPueblo linguistic areaTanoanCoahuiltecanAranamaKarankawaMaratinoNaolanQuiniguaSolanoTonkawaMuskogeanNatchezAtakapaChitimachaCalusa–TunicaTunicaCalusaMesoamericanChibchanLencanMisumalpanOto-MangueanTotozoqueanTotonacanMixe–ZoqueUto-AztecanXincanCuitlatecPurépechaAlagüilacCaribbeanArawakanCaribanPre-ArawakanGuanahatabeyMacorixCiguayoAmerindAlgonquian–WakashanAztec–TanoanMacro-MayanMacro-ChibchanTolatecanWaroidUnclassified languagesLinguistic areas