Sentinelese language
{{Short description|Language of the Sentinelese}}
{{Infobox language
| name = Sentinelese
| altname =
| states = India
| region = North Sentinel Island, southwest of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands
| ethnicity = Sentinelese
| speakers = ~100–250
| date = 2018
| ref = e25
| familycolor = Andamanese
| family = unclassified (Ongan?)
| iso3 = std
| pushpin_map = Bay of Bengal
| pushpin_map_caption = Location in the Bay of Bengal
| pushpin_label_position = left
| coordinates = {{coord|11.55|92.25}}
| glotto = sent1241
| glottorefname = Sentinel
{{Tmbox|name=No information|text=We don't have much info on this language, and we might never have. The tribe who speaks this language is isolated.}}
| map = Languages and dialects of the Andaman Islands at British contact.png
| mapcaption = North Sentinel Island, the small grey island to the southwest, shown in the context of the other Andamanese languages.
| acceptance = unattested
}}
Sentinelese is the undescribed language of the Sentinelese people of North Sentinel Island in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India. Due to the lack of contact between the Sentinelese people and the rest of the world, essentially nothing is known of their language.{{cite book|last=Van Driem|first=G.|year=2007|chapter=Endangered Languages of South Asia|title=Handbook of Endangered Languages|pages=303–341|location=Berlin|publisher=Mouton de Gruyter}}
Classification
It is presumed that the islanders speak a single language and that it is a member of one of the Andamanese language families.{{cite web|title=The most isolated tribe in the world?|url=http://www.survivalinternational.org/campaigns/mostisolated|work=Survival International|access-date=2009-10-07|archive-date=2019-10-26|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191026045615/https://www.survivalinternational.org/campaigns/mostisolated|url-status=dead}} Based on what little is known about similarities in culture and technology and their geographical proximity, it is supposed that their language is related to the Ongan languages, such as Jarawa, rather than to Great Andamanese. On the documented occasions when Onge-speaking individuals were taken to North Sentinel Island in order to attempt communication, they were unable to recognise any of the language spoken by the inhabitants.{{cite book|author=Pandya, Vishvajit|year=2008|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ocgNvcvYc9gC&pg=PA361|title=In the Forest: Visual and Material Worlds of Andamanese History (1858–2006)|publisher=University Press of America|page=362|isbn=978-0-7618-4153-1}} It has been recorded that the Jarawa and Sentinelese languages are mutually unintelligible.{{cite report|url=http://censusindia.gov.in/Ad_Campaign/drop_in_articles/06-Enumeration_of_Primitive_Tribes_in_A&N_Islands.pdf|title=Enumeration of Primitive Tribes in A&N Islands: A Challenge|quote=The first batch could identify 31 Sentinelese. The second batch could count altogether 39 Sentinelese consisting of male and female adults, children and infants. During both the contacts the enumeration team tried to communicate with them through some Jarawa words and gestures, but, Sentinelese could not understand those verbal words.|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141211011020/http://censusindia.gov.in/Ad_Campaign/drop_in_articles/06-Enumeration_of_Primitive_Tribes_in_A%26N_Islands.pdf|archive-date=11 December 2014|url-status=live}}
Status
Sentinelese is classified as an endangered language due to a highly likely small number of speakers, matching the unknown population of the island, which has been estimated at anywhere from 100 to 250; an estimate by the Indian government is 100.{{cite book|last=Moseley|first=Christopher|year=2007|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dQt6XWloU10C&pg=PA289|title=Encyclopedia of the world's endangered languages|publisher=Routledge|pages=289, 342|isbn=978-0-7007-1197-0}}{{cite journal|last=Abbi|first=Anvita|year=2006|title=Endangered Languages of the Andaman Islands|journal=LINCOM Studies in Asian Linguistics|volume=64|location=München|publisher=Lincom}}{{cite book|last=Brenzinger|first=Matthias|year=2007|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qtcmm6N6LPYC&pg=PA40|title=Language diversity endangered|publisher=Walter de Gruyter|page=40|isbn=978-3-11-017049-8|doi=10.1515/9783110197129}}
Lexicon
No words of the Sentinelese language are known with certainty. However, one personal name is tentatively attested: {{lang|std|Dāūwacho-chégálé-bāī}}, recorded by Maurice Portman as belonging to a Sentinelese man who "had, some years before, left the North Sentinel in a canoe and come across, via Rutland Island, to the Cinque Islands and the Little Andaman."{{Cite book |last=Portman |first=M. V. |url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.24181/page/n265/mode/2up?q=sentinelese |title=A History Of Our Relations With The Andamanese Vol.2 |date=1899 |pages=758, 764}} If the man was indeed from the island, and the attestation reflects his original Sentinelese name, it may represent an attestation of Sentinelese.
Further possible lexical information was provided in 2020 by Indian anthropologist Dr. M. Sreenathan, a member of the party who made brief contact on the island in the 1990s. He describes the Sentinelese shouting {{lang|std|liya}} and {{lang|std|luwa}} while gathering coconuts from the contact party, which he postulates mean 'near' and 'far' respectively, on the basis of comparable words in Jarawa. Other words transcribed by Sreenathan include {{lang|std|məəŋə məəŋɖa}}, {{lang|std|əc ale}}, {{lang|std|ʈ/ɖaŋ}}, {{lang|std|ɖaik}}, {{lang|std|kayə}}, {{lang|std|tu aɖe}}, {{lang|std|pila}} and {{lang|std|iŋ}}.'{{Cite book |last=Sreenathan |first=M |title=The Languages of Andaman and Nicobar Islands |last2=Devy |first2=G N |year=2020 |isbn=978-9390122301 |pages=33-34}}
References
{{Reflist}}{{Andamanese languages}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sentinelese Language}}