dih ISO 639

Kumiai

  • Geography

    MX Baja California state: Cañon de los Encinos, Ja’áa, La Huerta de los Indios, Rancho Nejí, San Antonio Nécua, and San José de la Zorra; mountains southeast of Tecate, 60 km east of Ensenada.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Mexico

dih
Campo, Cochimí, Comeya, Cuchimí, Diegueño, Jamul Diegueño, Jamul Tiipay, Kamia, Kamiai, Kamiyahi, Kamiyai, Ki-Miai, Ko’al, Ku’ahl, Kumeyaai, Kumeyaay, Kumia, Kw’aal, Quemayá, Tiipay, Tipai’, Tipái, Tipéi
290 in Mexico (2011 UNSD). No monolinguals (1993). Total users in all countries: 440.
Baja California state: Cañon de los Encinos, Ja’áa, La Huerta de los Indios, Rancho Nejí, San Antonio Nécua, and San José de la Zorra; mountains southeast of Tecate, 60 km east of Ensenada.
Mexico, Western United States of America
8a (Moribund).
Cochimí-Yuman, Yuman, Delta-California
Case-marking; 26 consonants and 9 vowels; alienable/inalienable possession.
Shifted to Spanish [spa].
Dictionary. Grammar. Texts.
Unwritten [Qaax].
Different from the extinct Cochimí language.
OLAC resources in and about Kumiai
Kumiai
150 in United States (Golla 2007). 40–50 fluent speakers of Kumeyaay, 100 speakers of Tipai, a few elderly people speak Ipai (Golla 2007).
California: east of San Diego and some in Imperial Valley.
Ipai, Tipai (Jamul Tiipay), Kumeyaay.
8a (Moribund)
Most shifted to English [eng].
Several Diegueno groups have begun language classes (Golla 2007).
View other languages of United States