Mokilese
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  • Please provide some background information about this language. Where is it spoken? What communities speak this language? Is this language endangered?
  • What are the names of the people who built this dictionary? Whose voices are in this dictionary?
  • Where did the data in this dictionary come from? Please describe if you collected the data yourself. If you used any published reference sources, please list them.
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The Mokilese speakers represented in this Living Dictionary are:
Danio Poll
Monique Poll
Monique Panaligan
Sanchez Johnson (recordings to identify)
Macy Edgars
Ichiro John
Kalio Lebehn
Stuart Mongs
Thakar Peter

There may be some errors correlating audio files with the correct names of speakers. Living Tongues researchers will correct these correlations in October 2024. 

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The Namolukese data found in this Living Dictionary was recorded at a Language Revitalization workshop that was held over 4 days in July 2013 in Kolonia, Pohnpei State, Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) hosted by the Island Research Education Initiative (IREI) and the FSM National Dept. of Education and Special Education Program. Greg Anderson and David Harrison of the Living Tongues Institute led the workshop, which aimed to leverage new digital technologies in support of Micronesian languages. Yvonne Neth of IREI was the local coordinator and partner.

The fifteen participants in the workshop represented eight indigenous language communities: Pohnpeian, Pingelapese, Kapingamarangi, Nukuoro, Namolukese (dialect of Mortlockese), Yapese, Mokilese, and Kosraean. Language activists taking part in the workshop included Johnny Rudolph, Maynard Henry and Kurt Erwin representing the Nukuoro language; Danio Poll, Jason Lebehn and Monique Panaligan representing Mokilese; Yapese language activist Caroline Dabugsiy; Namolukese language activist John Curley; Leilani Welley-Biza and Darlene Apis representing Pingelapese; Howartson Heinrich, Kapingamarangi language speaker; Arthur Albert representing Kosraean; and Pressler Martin and Mario Abello representing Pohnpeian.

This dictionary data was imported by Living Tongues researchers Anna Luisa Daigneault, Gregory D. S. Anderson and Diego Córdova Nieto to the Living Dictionaries platform in 2024.