dialect_varieties: "A lot of variation in 12 different dialects ( First People's Cultural Council, 2014).",
public_comment: "Carrier is the general term for a complex of Athabaskan dialects in central British Columbia, adjoining (but clearly distinct from) Babine on the northwest and Chilcotin on the south. Carrier (locally called Dakelh) is spoken in a number of local varieties, traditionally divided into “Upper Carrier” (the communities to the north of Fort St. James, around Stuart and Trembleur Lakes) and “Lower Carrier” in communities to the south. More recent research indicates that Lower Carrier should be split into a Fraser/Nechako dialect group (Prince George, Cheslatta, Stoney Creek, Nautley, and Stellakoh) and a Blackwater dialect group (Ulkatcho, Kluskus, Nazko, Red Bluff, and Anahim Lake). A Carrier lingua franca was established by Catholic missionaries (most notably Father A. G. Morice) in the 19th century, based on the dialect around Fort St. James, and a syllabic writing system was introduced.
Ethnologue distinguishes Carrier [crx] from Southern Carrier [caf], not distinguished by other scholars.",
private_comment: null,
source_id: null,
speakers: [
{
id:2339,
code_id:1680,
speaker_number: "1000-9999",
speaker_number_text: "1,500",
second_language_speakers: null,
semi_speakers: null,
children: null,
young_adults: null,
older_adults: null,
elders: null,
ethnic_population: null,
date_of_info: null,
public_comment: null,
private_comment: null,
source_id:1881,
preferred: 0,
},
{
id:2340,
code_id:1680,
speaker_number: "1000-9999",
speaker_number_text: "1,000",
second_language_speakers: null,
semi_speakers: null,
children: "0",
young_adults: null,
older_adults: null,
elders: null,
ethnic_population: "4,000",
date_of_info: null,
public_comment: null,
private_comment: null,
source_id:414,
preferred: 0,
},
{
id:12652,
code_id:1680,
speaker_number: null,
speaker_number_text: "",
second_language_speakers: "",
semi_speakers: "",
children: "",
young_adults: "",
older_adults: "",
elders: "",
ethnic_population: "",
date_of_info: "",
public_comment: "Carrier is the general term for a complex of Athabaskan dialects in central British Columbia, adjoining (but clearly distinct from) Babine on the northwest and Chilcotin on the south.",
private_comment: null,
source_id:88278,
preferred: 0,
},
{
id:13532,
code_id:1680,
speaker_number: null,
speaker_number_text: null,
second_language_speakers: null,
semi_speakers: null,
children: null,
young_adults: null,
older_adults: null,
elders: null,
ethnic_population: null,
date_of_info: null,
public_comment: null,
private_comment: null,
source_id:102,
preferred: 0,
},
{
id:20150,
code_id:1680,
speaker_number: "100-999",
speaker_number_text: "731",
second_language_speakers: "",
semi_speakers: "1,484",
children: "",
young_adults: "",
older_adults: "",
elders: "",
ethnic_population: "11,807",
date_of_info: "",
public_comment: "",
private_comment: null,
source_id:91680,
preferred: 0,
},
{
id:31977,
code_id:1680,
speaker_number: "100-999",
speaker_number_text: "680",
second_language_speakers: "",
semi_speakers: "1380",
children: "",
young_adults: "",
older_adults: "",
elders: "",
ethnic_population: "",
date_of_info: "2014",
public_comment: "",
private_comment: null,
source_id:99316,
preferred:1,
},
],
language: {
code_id:1680,
featured: 0,
cached_documentation_score:-1,
google_group_url: "",
simplified_level: "high",
coordinates: "53.5600000, -122.8900000",
updated_at: "2018-03-29 08:08:43",
speaker_attitude: "",
government_support: "",
institutional_support: "",
_other_languages_used: "English",
domains_of_use: "The language is sometimes used in the home, along with other languages. Most speakers prefer using another language, or don't care if the language is no longer used. There is no support for the language from government or other organizations, and there is no education or literacy in the language.",