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  1. ca. 1000 CE. Reconstructed. ancestors. Proto-Eskaleut. Proto-Eskimoan. Proto-Inuit is the reconstructed proto-language of the Inuit languages, probably spoken about 1000 years BP by the Neo-Eskimo Thule people. [1] It evolved from Proto-Eskimo, from which the Yupik languages also evolved. [2]

  2. The Inuit languages constitute a branch of the Eskimo–Aleut language family. They are closely related to the Yupik languages and more remotely to Aleut. These other languages are all spoken in western Alaska, United States, and eastern Chukotka, Russia.

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  4. 3 days ago · There are about 140,000 Eskimos and Aleuts, of whom about 90,000 speak an E [skimo-]A [leut] language. More than half of this number are in Greenland—where, as in much of eastern Canada, the Inuit language remains fully viable.

  5. Sep 1, 2014 · Inuit language, history, semantics, sociology, and anthropology show a variety of distinct characteristics in different parts of this vast area.

  6. Inuit language, the northeastern division of the Eskimo languages of the Eskimo-Aleut (Eskaleut) language family spoken in northern Alaska, Canada, and Greenland (Kalaallit.

  7. Summarize this article for a 10 year old. The Inuit languages are a closely related group of indigenous American languages traditionally spoken across the North American Arctic and the adjacent subarctic regions as far south as Labrador.

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