Lenni Lenape means 'Human Beings' or the 'Real People' in the Unami language. Their
autonym is also spelled
Lennape or
Lenapi, in Unami and in Munsee meaning 'the people.' The term
Delaware was used by the English, who named the people for their territory by the
Delaware River. They named the river in honor of
Lord De La Warr, the governor of the colony at
Jamestown, Virginia. Other estimates for approximately 1600 AD suggest 6,500 Unami and 4,500 Munsee, with data lacking for Long Island Munsee. These groups were never united politically or linguistically, and the names
Delaware, Munsee, and
Unami postdate the period of consolidation of these local groups. At the time of first contact of Europeans colonizers in the 17th century, the Lenape resided in relatively small communities consisting of a few hundred people. The intensity of contact with European settlers resulted in the gradual displacement of some of the Lenape people from their aboriginal homeland, in a series of population movements of
genocidal intent involving forced relocation and consolidation of small local groups, extending over a period of more than two hundred years. Until recently there were a small number of Unami speakers in Oklahoma; the language is now
extinct there as a first language, but is spoken fluently as a learned language by enrolled members of the two Delaware tribes in Oklahoma. Some language revitalization work is underway by the
Delaware Tribe of Indians. Equally affected by consolidation and dispersal, Munsee groups moved to several locations in southern Ontario as early as the late 18th century, to
Moraviantown,
Munceytown, and
Six Nations. Several different patterns of migration led to groups of Munsee speakers moving to
Stockbridge in present-day
Wisconsin,
Cattaraugus in present-day
New York state, and
Kansas. In 1892 the Munsee-Delaware and Moraviantown children were sent to Mount Elgin Residential School where only English language was permitted to be spoken. The Lenape language began its disappearance along the Grand River in Six Nations and to rapidly vanish in Munsee-Delaware Nation. Only in Moraviantown the Lenape language was used on a daily basis from a majority of the nation and help on the preservation of the language. Today Munsee survives only at Moraviantown, where there are two fluent first language speakers aged 77 and 90 as of 2018. There are no fluent speakers left in the Munsee-Delaware nation of the Lenape people living in Canada; however, there are members that are working to revitalize the language within the community. The class focused on beginner phrases and grammar, but also included information about the history and culture of the Lenape people. Books used in the class included
Conversations in Lenape Language and
Advanced Supplements (both written by De Paul). Despite their relative closeness the two are sufficiently distinguished by features of syntax, phonology, and vocabulary that speakers of both consider them not
mutually intelligible so that, more recently, linguists have treated them as separate languages. Munsee Delaware was spoken in the central and lower
Hudson River Valley, western
Long Island, the upper
Delaware River Valley, and the northern third of
New Jersey in present-day
North Jersey. While dialect variation in Munsee was likely there is no information about possible dialectal subgroupings. Unami Delaware was spoken in the area south of Munsee speakers in the Delaware River Valley and New Jersey, south of the
Delaware Water Gap and the
Raritan Valley. The Northern Unami groups were south of the Munsee groups, with the southern boundary of the Northern Unami area being at Tohickon Creek on the west bank of the Delaware River and between Burlington and Trenton on the east bank. The poorly known Unalachtigo dialect is described as having been spoken in the area between Northern and Southern Unami, with only a small amount of evidence from one group. Both Munsee and Unami speakers use
Delaware if enrolled and
Lenape if not enrolled as a self-designation in English. The Unamis residing in Oklahoma are sometimes referred to as
Oklahoma Delaware, while the Munsees in Ontario are sometimes referred to as
Ontario Delaware or
Canadian Delaware. Munsee-speaking residents of Moraviantown use the English term
Munsee to refer to residents of Munceytown, approximately to the east and refer to themselves in English as "Delaware", and in Munsee as 'Delaware person, Indian'. Oklahoma Delawares refer to Ontario Delaware as or , terms that are also used for people of Munsee ancestry in their own communities. Some Delawares at Moraviantown also use the term
Christian Indian as a preferred self-designation in English. The equivalent Munsee term is , meaning "one who prays, Moravian convert". Munsee speakers refer to Oklahoma Delawares as
Unami in English or in Munsee. The
Oklahoma Delawares refer to themselves in English as
Delaware and in Unami as . The name
Lenape, which is sometimes used in English for both Delaware languages together, is the name Unami speakers also use for their own language in English, whereas Munsee speakers call their language in English . Uniquely among scholars, Kraft uses
Lenape as a cover term to refer to all Delaware-speaking groups. Munsee speakers refer to their language as , meaning "speaking the Delaware language". ==Phonology==