Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 10Carleton University, 1979 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 227
Marguerite MacKenzie Memorial University of Newfoundland The dialect of Cree1 spoken by the Fort Chimo Indians ... is considered to be one of the y dialects like those of the east coast of James and Hudson Bays ( MacKenzie 1977 ) .
Marguerite MacKenzie Memorial University of Newfoundland The dialect of Cree1 spoken by the Fort Chimo Indians ... is considered to be one of the y dialects like those of the east coast of James and Hudson Bays ( MacKenzie 1977 ) .
Page 230
The retention of h in all positions is a feature of the y - dialects . ... These phonological features show that the dialect spoken by the Fort Chimo people has incorporated features of the northern y - dialects to the west and of the n ...
The retention of h in all positions is a feature of the y - dialects . ... These phonological features show that the dialect spoken by the Fort Chimo people has incorporated features of the northern y - dialects to the west and of the n ...
Page 234
The n - dialect which these Montagnais speak is closely related to that of the James and Hudson Bay coast and that of the Barren Ground group but is still quite distinct . A striking feature of many Montagnais dialects is the change of ...
The n - dialect which these Montagnais speak is closely related to that of the James and Hudson Bay coast and that of the Barren Ground group but is still quite distinct . A striking feature of many Montagnais dialects is the change of ...
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Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
MEANINGS | 16 |
H Christoph Wolfart University of Manitoba | 37 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
aawa Abnaki affix Albemarle area Algonquian languages American Androscoggin Androscoggin River animate appears auas Bloomfield Brunswick Museum century Champlain Society Chesapeake area Chickahominy river Chimo colonial Comp consonant Cree culture curriculum Davis Inlet dialects Dibblee dictionary England English Etchemin être European examples Fort Chimo French Golden Lake grammatical History Hudson Bay ibid independent Index inventories James John Kennebec River Kyrie l'enfant Latin linguistic Malecite Maliseet Maliseet-Passamaquoddy Massachusetts materials medicines Micmac missionaries Montagnais Namieu Narragansett narrative Naskapi native Newfoundland noko'siksi noms noun phrase obviative Ojibwa Ottawa paper Passamaquoddy Penobscot Plantation Indians plural probate records pronoun Proto-Algonquian Quebec refer relations relative clauses Roanoke area Ruperts House Saint Francis Saint John River Schefferville sentence shaman social speakers stories structure suffixes tense term thematic third person Thomas Toronto traditional tribe tshe University village vowel Wabanaki witches Woodstock word y-dialects Youghtanund Youghtanund river