The Proto-Lencan homeland was most likely in central Honduras (Campbell 1997:167). At the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, the use of Honduran Lenca and Salvadoran Lenca began to decline. In the 1950s, Honduran Lenca was already in a critical state of extinction, since the only place where there were speakers was
Guajiquiro. In 1982 a Honduran Lenca speaker was found in Guajiquiro. In the 1970s, died in
Chilanga, Anselmo Hernández, the last competent Salvadoran Lenca speaker. In the 1990s, some
semi-speakers of Honduran Lenca were found. It was assumed that the languages were most likely extinct, and it was believed that it was very unlikely that there were any elders with any knowledge or memory of both languages, and it was also believed that it was very unlikely that fluent speakers could be found. The Honduran Lenca is currently believed to be extinct. However, linguist Alan R. King, in his 2016 book titled in spanish
Conozcamos el Lenca, una lengua de El Salvador (where he also used the Potón Piau primer as a reference), points out that (translating in english: "Today no one knows how to speak Lenca, although certain individuals have memories of—or have learned—some fragments of that now lost language. This type of partial knowledge is not even remotely close, in any case that we have been able to verify, to a real mastery of the historical language, whose disappearance dates back to the mid-twentieth century...". While in the case of
Honduran Lenca, the
linguist American Alan R. King, in the company of his colleague
James Morrow, in 2017 they published the book
Kotik molka niwamal (meaning ''Let's learn to speak Lenca''), which is a compilation of words in Lenca among the communities still existing that opens the possibility of recovering a significant part of the language. Currently in El Salvador there are rehabilitation projects for
Salvadoran Lenca to prevent its extinction. A 2002 novel by
Roberto Castillo,
La guerra mortal de los sentidos, chronicles the adventures of the "Searcher for the Lenca Language." ==Proto-language== Proto-Lenca reconstructions by Arguedas (1988): ==References==