About The Last Word
A language dies when its last fluent speaker does. The Last Word is a catalog of those endings — documented case files of extinct and dying tongues, traced from what the language was to the death of the last person who spoke it, with the dates, names, and sources behind each one.
What you'll find here
- Languages that ended with a single named person — the last fluent speaker, and the day they died
- What made each language unique: its sounds, grammar, and writing, and who spoke it
- What silenced it: colonization, forced schooling, assimilation, migration, genocide
- Whether anything was recorded in time — and whether a revival is under way
- Dormant and reawakening languages, not only the ones counted as gone
Every entry follows the same structure: a summary, a decline timeline, a "Profile" of the language, "The Silencing," and "The Last Speaker," then what silenced it, the legacy, and the lessons — sourced from linguistic scholarship, UNESCO and Ethnologue data, obituaries, and archival recordings.
A language is a whole way of seeing the world. Telling its end through the one person who carried it last is how you measure what disappears when it goes quiet.
Sister sites
The Last Word is part of The Vanished — a family of sites cataloging the last of everything: