Tagish language

Tagish was a language spoken by the Tagish or Carcross-Tagish, a First Nations people that historically lived in the Northwest Territories and Yukon in Canada. The name Tagish derives from /ta:gizi dene/, or "Tagish people", which is how they refer to themselves, where /ta:gizi/ is a place name meaning "it (spring ice) is breaking up.

Tagish
Tā̀gish
Native toCanada
EthnicityTagish people
Extinct2008, with the death of Lucy Wren
Language codes
ISO 639-3tgx
Glottologtagi1240
ELPTagish
Tagish is classified as Critically Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger

The language is a Northern Athabaskan language, closely related to Tahltan and Kaska. The three languages are often grouped together as Tahltan-Kaska-Tagish; the three languages are considered dialects of the same language by some. As of 2004, there was only 1 native fluent speaker of Tagish documented: Lucy Wren (Agaymā/Ghùch Tlâ). She died in 2008.

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