Native American language
Native cultures
Native American Indian heritage

Hoh Indian Language
The Hoh Indians are a small tribe of Washington state, relatives of the
Quinault and
Quileute Indians
and speakers of a Quileute dialect.
The Hoh language is no longer spoken today, but some young people are working to learn their ancestral
language again.
Sponsored Links
MultiTree: Hoh Dialect:
Theories about Hoh's language relationships compiled by Linguist List.
Quileute Language:
Our resources about the Quileute language (including Hoh.)
The Hoh Tribe:
Homepage of the Hoh Nation today.
Hoh Tribe History:
Article on the Hoh tribe from the Handbook of American Indians.
Hoh Indian Tribe of the Hoh Indian Reservation:
Wikipedia article on the Hoh Indians.
Four Directions: Hoh:
Timeline and links about Hoh history.
Books for sale on the Hoh Indians
Our organization earns a commission from any book bought through these links
Evergreen Ethnographies: Hoh, Chehalis, Suquamish, and Snoqualmi of Western Washington:
History and culture of the Hoh tribe and their neighbors.
A Guide to the Indian Tribes of the Pacific Northwest:
Book on the history of the Northwest Coast tribes, including a section on the Hoh.
Links, References, and Additional Information
Los Hoh:
Information about the Hohs and their language in Spanish.
Hoh Tribe:
Hoh links pages.

Back to our Native American tribe list
Back to Native American tribes for kids

Native artwork
Addies
American Native tattoos
Would you like to sponsor work on the Hoh language page?
Native Languages of the Americas website © 1998-2020
Contacts and FAQ page