Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volumes 15-16Carleton University, 1984 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 188
I think as anthropologists and ethnohistorians we have a responsibility to help repatriate the Indians ' past in the form of their oral history . As one writer has remarked , in " giving a past it also helps them toward a future of ...
I think as anthropologists and ethnohistorians we have a responsibility to help repatriate the Indians ' past in the form of their oral history . As one writer has remarked , in " giving a past it also helps them toward a future of ...
Page 298
It most commonly takes the form -pan , and in Moose Cree , its most basic function is to indicate imperfective aspect in the past . However , it can also be used to indicate that an event or state is hypothetical , or more specifically ...
It most commonly takes the form -pan , and in Moose Cree , its most basic function is to indicate imperfective aspect in the past . However , it can also be used to indicate that an event or state is hypothetical , or more specifically ...
Page 300
Significantly here also in both the English and the Cree is the presence of past tense marking on the verb ( in Cree , the preterit ) . In the English examples above , ' were ' is past tense ( historically a past tense subjunctive ...
Significantly here also in both the English and the Cree is the presence of past tense marking on the verb ( in Cree , the preterit ) . In the English examples above , ' were ' is past tense ( historically a past tense subjunctive ...
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Contents
Carol Dana | 15 |
LouisPhilippe Vaillancourt | 21 |
La fonction gélinotte | 49 |
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Common terms and phrases
agent Albany Algonquian American animals appear Attawapiskat bags called Carleton University cause century ceremonial classes clauses collection council Cree culture decorated described dialect direct discussed dubitative early England English European event evidence example expressed fact families final formal four given Gladys head hide hunting important Indian indicates interpretation Island James Lake land language langue linguistic Maine marked meaning medicine medicine bags names narrative Native North noted obviative occur Ojibwa oral original past patient Penobscot person pigs present Press proximate question records REFERENCES reported River scrolls seems semantic sentence Society speakers stories suggest symbols texts tion trade traditional tribes University verb village York