Language

X̌ik

Wakhi
  • Global speakers: 58,000
  • Glottocode: wakh1245
  • ISO 639-3: wbl
Southern AsiaPakistan flagPakistanTajikistan flagTajikistanPamiriGilgit-Baltistan
With approximately 40,000 speakers worldwide, Wakhi is a language of the Pamir mountains, spoken by small populations in adjacent, remote regions of Tajikistan, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and China. In New York, there are some six or seven Wakhi families from the Hunza area of Pakistan and a handful of Wakhis from the Pamir region of Tajikistan. All maintain some connection with the Ismaili community centered on the jamatkhana, or religious center, on Woodhaven Boulevard in Queens. Wakhi speaker Husniya Khujamyorova, originally from Murghab (Tajikistan) but now living in Brooklyn, has worked extensively on her language and other Pamiri languages with the Endangered Language Alliance since 2010, including fieldwork in New York, Tajikistan, and China. The results include a large set of recordings, a growing dictionary, a set of older materials digitized, and a planned future series of children's books.
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NYC neighborhoods or towns in the metro region where the language community has a significant site, marked by a point on the map:

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Bensonhurst
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  • Bay Ridge
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An urban language map

Welcome to Languages of New York City, a free and interactive digital map of the world’s most linguistically diverse metropolitan area.

All data, unless otherwise specified, is from the Endangered Language Alliance (ELA), based on information from communities, speakers, and other sources.

The map is a work in progress and a partial snapshot, focused on significant sites for Indigenous, minority, and endangered languages. Larger languages are represented selectively. To protect the privacy of speakers, some locations are slightly altered. Social media users, note that LANGUAGEMAP.NYC works best in a separate browser. We apologize that the map may not be fully accessible to all users, including the visually impaired.

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