Tututni language
| Tututni | |
|---|---|
| Tutudin, Coquille, Lower Rogue River, Rogue River | |
| Dotodəni | |
| Native to | Oregon | 
| Ethnicity | Coquille tribe, Tututni tribe (including Euchre Creek band), Chasta Costa tribe | 
| Extinct | 1983 3 (2006) | 
| Revival | 12 (2006) | 
| Dené–Yeniseian?
 
 | |
| Dialects | 
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| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | Either: tuu– Tututnicoq– Coquille | 
| Glottolog | tutu1242Tututnicoqu1236Coquille | 
| Tututni is classified as Extinct by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger | |
Tututni (Dotodəni, alternatively Tutudin tu-tu-DE-NE), also known as Upper Coquille, (Lower) Rogue River and Nuu-wee-ya, is an Athabaskan language spoken by three Tututni (Lower Rogue River Athabaskan) tribes: the Tututni tribe (including Euchre Creek band), the Coquille tribe, and the Chasta Costa tribe, who are part of the Rogue River Indian peoples of southwestern Oregon. In 2006 students at Linfield College participated in a project to "revitalize the language." It is one of the four languages belonging to the Oregon Athabaskan cluster of the Pacific Coast Athabaskan languages.
Dialects were Coquille (Upper Coquille, Mishikhwutmetunee), spoken along the upper Coquille River; Tututni (Tututunne, Naltunnetunne, Mikonotunne, Kwatami, Chemetunne, Chetleshin, Khwaishtunnetunnne); Euchre Creek, and Chasta Costa (Illinois River, Šista Qʼʷə́sta).