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Maliseet (Wolastoqey)

This guide's detailed text is shown in its source language while the translation is in progress. View the full site in English →

A1.1Orientation · Community-led language

1. About Maliseet (Wolastoqey)

Maliseet — by its own name Wolastoqey — is an Eastern Algonquian language of the Saint John (Wolastoq) River valley in New Brunswick and Maine.2

It and Passamaquoddy are dialects of a single language (Maliseet-Passamaquoddy / Wolastoqey-Peskotomuhkati), critically endangered with a few hundred fluent speakers between them. Confidence: High for classification; Medium for speaker figures. Wolastoq means ‘the beautiful/bountiful river.’

2. Where it sits in the family

Maliseet and Passamaquoddy together form one language of the Abenakian side of Eastern Algonquian; the two are largely mutually intelligible dialects.

3. Writing & shared features

Like the other Eastern Algonquian languages, Maliseet (Wolastoqey) is (or was) written with a Latin-based orthography developed with its community, and shares the family's hallmark structure: polysynthesis (long verb-words), an animate/inanimate gender system, and obviation (the proximate–obviative or ‘fourth person’ contrast). See the family overview for these shared features.1

4. A few community-sourced words

WordMeaning
Woliwonthank you

Confidence: High for these community-sourced words; kept deliberately minimal.

Learning resources

A2.1Fuller guide · community-led (in progress)

Status of this guide

This orientation covers Wolastoqey, its relation to Passamaquoddy, and one community word. A fuller course should draw on the Passamaquoddy-Maliseet Language Portal and community educators.

⚑ Requires community review before publication. This is an Indigenous language; any expansion should use community-authored and community-endorsed sources, respect the community’s preferred orthography, and avoid culturally sensitive material unless a community source presents it for learners.

Honest limitations

  • Maliseet and Passamaquoddy are dialects of one language; splitting them here follows the requested entry list, but learners should know they are the same language.
  • Most Eastern Algonquian languages are dormant or endangered; documentation quality varies and this guide is an honest orientation, not a full course.
  • Requires community review before publication (see above).
  • This is an orientation stub; a fuller community-led course is not yet built.