Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Twana language

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Native to
  
United States

Extinct
  
1980

Ethnicity
  
350 Twana (1977)

ISO 639-3
  
twa

Region
  
East of Puget Sound, Washington state

Language family
  
Salishan Coast Salish Central Twana

The Twana language, also known as Skokomish from one of the tribes that spoke it, belongs to the Salishan family of Native American languages. It is believed by some elders within the Skokomish community (such as Bruce Subiyay Miller) that the language branched off from Lushootseed (dxwəlšucid) because of the region-wide tradition of not speaking the name of someone who died for a year after their death. Substitute words were found in their place and often became normalizing in the community, generating differences from one community to the next. Subiyay speculated that this process increased the drift rate between languages and separated Twana firmly from xwəlšucid (Lushootseed).

The last fluent speaker died in 1980.

The name "Skokomish" comes from the Twana sqʷuqʷóʔbəš, also spelled sqWuqWu'b3sH, and meaning "river people" or "people of the river".

References

Twana language Wikipedia