Athabaskan language family Article

Athabaskan languages summary

Learn about the Athabaskan languages and their classification

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Below is the article summary. For the full article, see Athabaskan language family.

Athabaskan languages, or Athapaskan languages, Family of North American Indian languages. There are perhaps 200,000 speakers of Athabaskan languages. Northern Athabaskan includes more than 20 languages scattered across an immense region of subarctic North America from western Alaska to Hudson Bay and south to southern Alberta and British Columbia. Pacific Coast Athabaskan consisted of six languages, all now extinct or nearing extinction. Apachean consists of several closely related languages spoken in the southwestern U.S. and northern Mexico, including Navajo and the various subdivisions of Apache. In the early 21st century, Navajo had some 150,000 speakers, far more than any other indigenous language of the U.S. or Canada.