<b>$4.5 Million Awarded to Preserve Languages Threatened with Extinction</b><br><br>Tuesday, August 14, 2012 :: Staff infoZine<br><br>Awards support endangered languages spoken in Asia, Africa, Australia and the Americas.<br>
<br>Washington, D.C. - infoZine - The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the National Science Foundation (NSF) announced the award of five fellowships, 32 institutional grants, and six doctoral dissertation research awards totaling $4.5 million in the agencies' ongoing Documenting Endangered Languages (DEL) program.<br>
<br>This is the eighth round of their campaign to document languages threatened with extinction. Experts estimate that more than half of the approximately 7,000 currently-used human languages are bound for oblivion in this century, and the window of opportunity for high-quality language field documentation, they say, narrows with each passing year.<br>
<br>These new DEL awards will support digital documentation work on almost 30 endangered languages spoken in Asia, Africa, Australia and the Americas; enhance the computational infrastructure of the field; and provide training for the next generation of researchers.<br>
<br>It is important to document endangered languages for the wealth of linguistic and cognitive information that they offer. Advances in information technology allow for work on endangered languages that has not previously been possible.<br>
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