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Northern Pomo

Northern Pomo
Native to United States
Region Northern California
Extinct 2005
Pomoan
  • Western
    • Northern Pomo
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottolog nort2966
Pomoan languages map.svg
The seven Pomoan languages with an indication of their pre-contact distribution within California

Northern Pomo is a branch of the Pomoan Language family. The Pomo were a group of people who spoke what was documented as the Pomoan languages, and the speakers of Northern Pomo were those who lived specifically in the northern and largest area of the Pomoan territory. Other communities near to the Pomo were the Coast Yuki, the Huchnom, and the Athabascan.

Northern Pomo became classified as an extinct language with the passing of its last two known speakers, Edna Campbell Guerrerro in 1995 and Elenor Stevenson Gonzales in 2005.

Northern Pomo falls under the Western branch of the Pomoan language family, and it is the only language categorized in this branch that is not part of the Southern group.

The earliest noted documentation of Native Americans in this area was by General Drake in 1579, but it cannot be certain that the people he encountered were what is now considered to be the Pomo. A census was delivered of the people in this area by Colonel Redick M'Kee during an expedition in 1851 putting the Pomo at roughly 1000-1200 people. The language was not documented during either encounters.

Later expeditions by John Wesley Powell in 1891 and Samuel Barrett in 1908 would record accounts of the language family and its branches.

Northern Pomo was spoken in the United States of America in the northern coastal area of California. The Pomo inhabited a massive amount of territory north of the San Francisco Bay and surrounding Clear Lake in northern California, USA.

The Pomoan language was separated into seven different categories:

Each one is a different language that is a subcategory of the Pomoan language family.

Northern Pomo normally avoids the use of birth names in conversation, instead using relational terminology such as father, mother, sister, etc. This is especially present in the case of a deceased family member. The avoidance of names is why third person referencing is prevalent in Pomoan speech. If the deceased family member was close to the speaker, they will not speak their name even if a living relative shares that name. Any speaking partner is expected to avoid these names so that the speaker does not hear it. It is seen as a disrespect to their relationship with the deceased. More casual speakers may mention the names of the deceased in conversation that they are not related to.


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