Loup languages

Loup
Nipmuck
Pronunciation[lu] loo
Native toUnited States
RegionMassachusetts, Connecticut
Ethnicitylikely Nipmuck
Extinct18th century
transcribed with Latin script
Language codes
ISO 639-3Either:
xlo  Loup A
xlb  Loup B
xlo Loup A
 xlb Loup B
Glottologloup1243  Nipmuck
loup1245  Loup B

Loup is a term which refers to the Algonquian language varieties spoken in colonial New England as attested in the manuscripts of mid-eighteenth century French missionaries. It was attested in a notebook titled Mots loups (literally translating to 'wolf words'), compiled by Jean-Claude Mathevet, a priest who worked among Algonquian peoples, composing of 124 pages. Loup ('Wolf') was a French colonial ethnographic term, and usage was inconsistent. In modern literature, Loup A refers to the varieties described by Mathevet, and Loup B refers to those described by François-Auguste Magon de Terlaye.