Louisiana Creole Language (LOU) – L1 & L2 Speakers, Status, Map, Endangered Level & Official Use (original) (raw)
Summary
Louisiana Creole is an endangered indigenous language of the United States. It is a French-based creole. The language is used as a first language by older adults only. It is not known to be taught in schools.
Dashboard
Geography
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Population
Details
This visualization shows the approximate size of this language community, using five general ranges for a quick visual sense of scale. Need exact figures? Upgrade to Essentials or Standard to see detailed population estimates for each language.
Language Vitality
Indigenous Language Vitality CountBar chart showing vitality levels of indigenous languages in United States.
- Institutional
- Stable
- Endangered
- Extinct
Details
This graph shows the vitality of Louisiana Creole.
- Institutional — The language has been developed to the point that it is used and sustained by institutions beyond the home and community.
- Stable — The language is not being sustained by formal institutions, but it is still the norm in the home and community that all children learn and use the language.
- Endangered — It is no longer the norm that children learn and use this language.
- Extinct - The language is no longer used and no one retains a sense of ethnic identity associated with the language.
These four summary levels have been derived by grouping levels in the Expanded Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale (EGIDS), which is the more fine-grained scale that Ethnologue uses to assess the status of every language in terms of development versus endangerment; see Language Status for a description of the levels of that scale. See also the pages on Development and Endangerment for more discussion. Digital Language Support

Details
This graph shows the level of digital support for this language (as measured by the method described here.
- Still — this language shows no signs of digital support
- Emerging — the language has some content in digital form and/or encoding tools
- Ascending — the language has some spell checking or localized tools or machine translation as well
- Vital — the language is supported by multiple tools in all of the above categories and as well as some speech processing
- Thriving — the language has all of the above plus virtual assistants
Family
It belongs to the Creole language family.
Existing Content
- Dictionary
- Grammar
- Texts
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Ethnologue Country Digests
Explore Louisiana Creole and 240 other languages used in United States with_Ethnologue: Languages of United States_—a downloadable PDF document that provides detailed analysis presented in formats not available in the online version of Ethnologue. It includes:
- Comprehensive country overview.
- Statistical summaries by language status, size, and family.
- Alphabetical listing of languages in the country, with in-depth descriptions.
- Full-color language map(s) for visual reference.
- Listings by population, status, family, and region.
- Indexes of ISO 639 codes and alternate language names.
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Contributions
This section reports contributions that have been received for the Ethnologue description of this language. Please read the community norms page for more information on contributing.