Mitchigamea or Michigamea is an extinct language formerly spoken by the Mitchigamea people in Arkansas.
In 1673, Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet used a Mitchigamea man, who only spoke Illinois poorly, as a translator between the Illinois-speaking French, and the Siouan-speaking Quapaw.
[1] Jean Bernard Bossu provided two sentences from the mid-18th century which, according to John Koontz, indicate that Michigamea was a Siouan language of the Mississippi Valley branch.
[2] This article related to the Indigenous languages of the Americas is a stub.
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