Gros Ventre language

Atsina, or Gros Ventre (also known as Aaniiih, Ananin, Ahahnelin, Ahe, A’ani, and ʔɔʔɔɔɔniiih),[3] is the ancestral language of the Gros Ventre people of what is today Montana, United States of America.The last fluent speaker died in 2007,[1] though revitalization efforts are underway.Arapaho and Atsina are dialects of a common language usually designated by scholars as "Arapaho-Atsina".[1] Compared with Arapaho proper, Gros Ventre had three additional phonemes /tʲ/, /ts/, /kʲ/, and /bʲ/, and lacked the velar fricative /x/.[3][5] [6] This article related to the Indigenous languages of the Americas is a stub.
United StatesMontanaGros VentreExtinctTheresa LamebullRevivalLanguage familyAlgonquianArapahoanArapahoFort Belknap Indian CommunityISO 639-3GlottologUNESCOAtlas of the World's Languages in DangerUnited States of AmericaAaniiih Nakoda CollegePhraselatorBilabialDentalAlveolarPalatalGlottalPlosiveFricativeAffricateApproximantMithun, MarianneAlgic languagesBesawunenaNawathinehenaCree–Montagnais–NaskapiEast CreeMoose CreePlains CreeMichifSwampy CreeWoods CreeAtikamekwInnu-aimunNaskapiEastern AlgonquianMassachusettMassachusett PidginMassachusett Pidgin EnglishMohegan–PequotNarragansettQuiripi–Naugatuck–UnquachogDelawareMunseePidgin DelawareMahicanNanticokePiscatawayAbenakiCarolina AlgonquianEtcheminMaliseet–PassamaquoddyMi'kmaqPowhatanMesquakie–Sauk–KickapooMesquakie–SaukKickapooOjibwaPotawatomiAlgonquinBerens River OjibwaBorder Lakes OjibwaBroken OghibbewayCentral OjibwaChippewaEastern OjibwaNipissing OjibwaNorth of Superior OjibwaNorthwestern OjibwaOji-CreeOttawaWestern OjibwaAlgonquian–Basque pidginBlackfootCheyenneMenomineeMiami–IllinoisShawneeNansemondPamunkeyProto-AlgicProto-AlgonquianCreolePidginextinct languagesLanguages of MontanaIndigenousOjibweSalishanMontana SalishWestern SiouanAssiniboineStoneyLakotaKutenaiAmerican EnglishGermanIndigenous languages of the Americas