found: Work cat.: The Makah counting workbook, 1982:prelim. (text in English and Makah)
found: Native Languages WWW Site, 9 June 2006:Makah page (Makah language (Qwiqwidicciat); Makah is a Wakashan language of the Northwest Coast. Only a few elders in Washington still speak the language today)
found: Makah WWW Site, 9 June 2006:Our Language page (the Makah language is the ancestral tongue of the Makah Indian tribe, called Qwiqwidicciat; the Makah language belongs to the Southern Nootkan branch of the Wakashan language family; Makah is the only representative of these respective classifications in the United States as all other languages related to Makah are spoken in British Columbia, Canada)
found: Wikipedia WWW Site, 9 June 2006:Makah page (the Makah tribe linguistically belongs to the Southern Nootkan branch of the Wakashan family of languages among North American indigenous peoples. The Makah language, also known as Qwiqwidiccaq, is the only member of the family in the United States, with the other members spoken in Canada)
found: First lessons in Makah [rev. ed.], 1999:p. iii (Makah unrelated to neighboring languages of Olympic Peninsula (Clallam & Quileute); closest [linguistically] to Nitinat, Nootka; Makah, Nitinat, & Nootka constitute Nootkan or Southern Wakashan family)
found: Wakashan linguistics [online] page, Oct. 6, 2006(Makah, Southern Wakashan, Wakashan language family; spoken on Olympic Peninsula)