
Map showing the
Lenapehoking region. The
Raritan River in central New Jersey is the traditional boundary between Munsee and Unami-speaking peoples.
'Lenape' (also called 'Delaware') is a language in the
Algonquian language family spoken by the
Lenape people. It had two main dialects, 'Munsee' and 'Unami'. Munsee and Unami are not mutually intelligible and in fact have many differences, so linguists generally treat them as two closely related but separate languages, for example in the
Ethnologue.
Munsee, or Minnisink, was spoken in the upper Delaware River (including northern New Jersey), New York, and Long Island Sound. Munsee is now spoken in parts of Canada, on and near the reservations to which Munsee were removed. There is currently only one fluent native speaker remaining, at the reserve at
Moraviantown. Until the mid-20th century, there were also speakers at the nearby
Munceytown and
Six Nations reserves. In the early 20th century, there was also a small speaker community at the
Cattaraugus Seneca reservation in upstate New York.
Unami was spoken in the lower Delaware River (including central and southern New Jersey) and was most recently spoken in parts of Oklahoma, where Unami-speakers were removed. It is now
extinct, though language revitalization work is underway by the Delaware Tribe of Indians.
''Lenape'' is from , a word in the Unami dialect whose most literal translation into
English would be "the real people".
[1][2] (The common schoolbook term, ''Lenni-Lenape'' is not correct, but translates as, "the original real-people"). The Lenape names for the area they inhabited were ''Scheyischbi'', which means, "the place bordering the ocean," and
Lenapehoking, meaning "place where the people live," although the latter is not universally accepted as historical.
[1]
The
Order of the Arrow, an afflilate of the
Boy Scouts of America, attempts to preserve some legends and language elements of Lenape tribe. However, numerous local lodges of the Order of the Arrow do not emulate the customs of the Lenape alone, but mingle the Lenape customs with those of completely dissimilar tribes (e.g. the
Cherokee).
Notes
1. Composed of , "original, real, ordinary" + , "person"
2. Bright, William (2004). ''Native American Place Names in the United States''. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, pg. 251
See also
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Munsee-Delaware Nation 1, Ontario
External links
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Delaware (Lenape) Tribe of Indians
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Delaware Nation of Oklahoma
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Lenape Talking Dictionary