Gmail’s 57th Supported Language is Cherokee, Its First Native American Tribal Language

Cherokee has become the first Native American language fully integrated into Gmail.

By Jorge Rivas Nov 20, 2012

Cherokee has become the first Native American language fully integrated into Gmail. That means users can now exchange emails and instant message chats entirely in the Cherokee Syllabary, just as they would in English, Spanish or other languages. Google worked with the The Cherokee Nation and Durbin Feeling – the author of the Cherokee-English Dictionary – to translate hundreds of Gmail terms from English to Cherokee. "When Google decides to support a language, it’s not just about which ones have the largest number of speakers. In order to do business around the world, we need to support languages with millions of speakers, such as Japanese, French or Arabic," Craig Cornelius, a Google software engineer, said in a statement. "But we also want to include less spoken languages in order to help preserve the culture and diversity that come with them." [A 2002 survey](http://www.cherokee.org/Services/Education/30831/Information.aspx) of the Oklahoma Cherokee population found that "no one under 40 spoke conversational Cherokee." The partnership with Google is part of an effort to use technology to encourage a new generation to learn the language. [Software engineer Craig Cornelius explains how this partnership came about on the Gmail Blog: ](http://gmailblog.blogspot.com/2012/11/gmail-get-started-with-gmail-in-cherokee.html) > It was just coincidence that I, a Google engineer working on the internationalization of Google products, ended up carpooling back to San Francisco with Vance Blackfox, member of the Cherokee Nation (CN) from an event we’d both attended. But that coincidence kick-started a collaboration that would result in Google Web Search in Cherokee and, starting today, Gmail in Cherokee. > > After a 2002 survey of the Oklahoma Cherokee population found that no one under 40 spoke conversational Cherokee, the Cherokee Nation saw an opportunity to use technology to encourage everyday use of the language among the younger generation. Vance connected me with the language technology department at the Cherokee Nation, and the Gmail team worked closely with their highly organized team of volunteers, which ranged from university students to Durbin Feeling–Cherokee living treasure and author of the Cherokee-English Dictionary. Together, we were able to find and implement the right words for hundreds of Gmail terms, from "inbox" (?????) and "sign in" (???? ????) to "spam" (???). > > Gmail in Cherokee and the Cherokee version of Google Web Search both include a virtual keyboard for typing the syllabary writing system invented by Sequoyah in the early 1800s. Now Cherokee students can easily contact their tribal elders, e.g., "Joseph wants to chat" ("??? ??? ??????") and connect instantly. As Joseph Erb, Language Technologist at the Cherokee Nation put it, "Projects like these give more life to our language in our communities. It is not just about preserving our language and culture. It is about using our language each day and every day and continuing who we are as a people. And this give us that chance each time we check our email." In 2003, Apple added the font "Plantagenet Cherokee" to its MacOS operating system. In 2010, Cherokee became the first Native language and one of only 40 worldwide languages integrated into the iPhone’s operating system.