Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 23Carleton University, 1992 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 65
... characters , he also used Cree vocab- ulary to embellish his narrative , calling many items by their Cree names , sometimes with translation into English , sometimes without . As an exam- ple , consider this sentence from The Grizzly ...
... characters , he also used Cree vocab- ulary to embellish his narrative , calling many items by their Cree names , sometimes with translation into English , sometimes without . As an exam- ple , consider this sentence from The Grizzly ...
Page 159
... character Wolf in the preceding three clauses , ( 94 ) is understood to refer to Wolf without the use of a noun since the use of obviatives in the preceding text indicates continuation of Wolf as the proximate character and the use of a ...
... character Wolf in the preceding three clauses , ( 94 ) is understood to refer to Wolf without the use of a noun since the use of obviatives in the preceding text indicates continuation of Wolf as the proximate character and the use of a ...
Page 160
... characters , Chickadee and Frog , without a proximate shift . All of the participants in these clauses are obviative ... character Wolf . The preceding clause in ( 103 ) involves a verb of seeing , as does the next clause to refer to ...
... characters , Chickadee and Frog , without a proximate shift . All of the participants in these clauses are obviative ... character Wolf . The preceding clause in ( 103 ) involves a verb of seeing , as does the next clause to refer to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Algonquian American animals Anne's appear band bear Canadian Carleton University century Cherokee chief claim clan clause Company consonant contain continued Court Cree culture Delaware described dialects discourse discussion early English evidence example fact final furs given hunting important included Indian indicates individual inverse involved issues John Kutenai Lake land languages Linguistics living marked meaning Michigan Micmac Native North noted nouns object obviation obviative occur Ojibwa Ontario participant pattern political possessed possible present Press prox proximate question records reduplication reference reported represent River Roy's shift shows similar social society stem story suggests syllable third person trade traditional trappers treaty tribe United University verb Vincent vowel White York young