scs ISO 639

Satúotine Yatí Autonyms

Slavey, North

  • Geography

    CA Northwest Territories: Mackenzie district, middle Mackenzie River from Fort Norman north, around Great Bear Lake; Colville Lake, Deline, Fort Good Hope, Norman Wells, and Tulita in Mackenzie Mountains; Yellowknife.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Canada

scs
Dene, Dené, Esclave du Nord, Mackenzian, “Slave” (pej.), “Slavi” (pej.)
Satúotine Yatí
770 (2016 census). Bearlake dialect: 580; Hare dialect: 145; Mountain dialect: 100 (Golla 2007). Ethnic population: 1,950 (Golla 2007). Bearlake dialect: 1,070. Hare dialect: 710. Mountain dialect: 170 (Golla 2007).
Northwest Territories: Mackenzie district, middle Mackenzie River from Fort Norman north, around Great Bear Lake; Colville Lake, Deline, Fort Good Hope, Norman Wells, and Tulita in Mackenzie Mountains; Yellowknife.
Canada
6b (Threatened). Statutory language of provincial identity in NWT (1988, NWT Official Languages Act, Chapter 56 (Supplemented), Section 4). Language of recognized indigenous peoples: Behdzi Ahda’, Deline, Fort Good Hope, Nahanni Butte, Ross River, Tulita Dene, Yellowknives Dene.
Eyak-Athabaskan, Athabaskan, Northern Athabaskan, Slavey-Hare
Hare, Bearlake, Mountain Slavey. North and South Slavey [xsl] form a chain of related varieties. A member of macrolanguage Slave [den].
Deline still has strong language use including young people. Decreasing use in other communities. Over half actively use it in the home. Some young people, all adults. All also use English [eng].
Dictionary. Grammar.
Latin script [Latn]. Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics script [Cans], no longer in use.
OLAC resources in and about Slavey, North