ʻO nā ʻŌlelo Liu Kiu (琉球語派, Ryukyu-goha, ʻŌlelo Pelekania: Ryukyuan languages) nā ʻōlelo ʻōiwi o nā mokupuni o Liu Kiu.

Palapalaʻāina o nā ʻōlelo Liu Kiu.

Nā ʻōlelo E ho'opololei

Inoa o nā ʻōlelo Liu Kiu[1]
Inoa Inoa ʻŌiwi
ʻŌlelo Okinawa Uchinaaguchi
ʻŌlelo Kunigami Yanbaru kutūba
ʻŌlelo Amami Shimayumuta
ʻŌlelo Miyako Myākufutsu
ʻŌlelo Yaeyama Yaimamuni
ʻŌlelo Ionaguni Dunan munui

Kūmole E ho'opololei

  1. Use them or lose them: There's more at stake than language in reviving Ryukyuan tongues (Japan Times)
  He ʻōmuku kēia mea. Inā hiki iā ʻoe ke ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi, e kōkua mai i ka holomua ʻana i kēia mea.