Kumeyaay | |
---|---|
Southern Diegueño | |
Native to | United States, Mexico |
Region | California, Baja California |
Ethnicity | Kumeyaay |
Native speakers | 500 in Mexico (2020 census)[1] 40–50 in the United States (2007)[2] |
Yuman
| |
Dialects |
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | dih (as part of Diegueño) |
Glottolog | kumi1248 Tipaikwat1246 Kwatl |
ELP | Kumeyaay |
Kumeyaay (Kumiai), also known as Central Diegueño, Kamia, 'Iipay Aa, and Campo, is the Native American language spoken by the Kumeyaay people of southern San Diego and Imperial counties in California as well as five Kumiai communities in Baja California Norte, Mexico.
Hinton in 1994 suggested a conservative estimate of 50 native speakers of Kumeyaay.[3] There were 377 speakers reported in the 2010 Mexican census, including 88 who called their language "Cochimi".[4] The Barona Intertribal Dictionary[5] lists among its Core Contributor Group, Patrick Melvin Curo and among its Extended Group, Stanley Rodriguez, Ed.D. and Ana Gloria Rodriguez, M.Ed. who continue to teach the language today.
Kumeyaay belongs to the Yuman language family and to the Delta–California branch of that family. Kumeyaay and its neighbors, 'Iipay to the north and Tiipay to the south, were often considered to be dialects of a single Diegueño language, but the 1990 consensus among linguists seems to be that at least three distinct languages are present within the dialect chain.[6]
Confusingly, Kumeyaay is commonly used as a designation both for the central language of this family and for the 'Iipay-Tiipay-Kumeyaay people as a whole. Tiipay is also commonly used as a collective designation for speakers of both Kumeyaay and Tiipay proper.