Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 17Carleton University, 1986 - Algonquian Indians |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 13
Page 297
Dialect Symbols in Aubery's Dictionary PAULEENA MACDOUGALL SEEBER Penobscot Nation , Old Town , Maine Aubery's Abenaki Dictionary is composed of two manuscripts , one a French - Abenaki lexicon , and the other Abenaki - French .
Dialect Symbols in Aubery's Dictionary PAULEENA MACDOUGALL SEEBER Penobscot Nation , Old Town , Maine Aubery's Abenaki Dictionary is composed of two manuscripts , one a French - Abenaki lexicon , and the other Abenaki - French .
Page 307
A comparison of the sample marked “ L ” reveals 22 Abenaki words , 14 found in EAb and 10 in WAB , 2 words can be found in both languages . I was unable to locate 5 of the entries in any Abenaki lexicon . The sample appears to be an ...
A comparison of the sample marked “ L ” reveals 22 Abenaki words , 14 found in EAb and 10 in WAB , 2 words can be found in both languages . I was unable to locate 5 of the entries in any Abenaki lexicon . The sample appears to be an ...
Page 309
We know that they were politically allied with the Abenakis of Maine . ... The systematic analysis of the vocabulary , phonemes , and syntax suggest an Eastern Abenaki language that is geographically between the Androscoggin dialect of ...
We know that they were politically allied with the Abenakis of Maine . ... The systematic analysis of the vocabulary , phonemes , and syntax suggest an Eastern Abenaki language that is geographically between the Androscoggin dialect of ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
Roger Spielmann and Bertha Chief | 313 |
John A Strong | 327 |
MarcAdélard Tremblay and Josée Thivierge | 343 |
1 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Abenaki Aboriginal language activities Algonquian animals appears aspect Band base Board called Canada Carleton University century church clauses Conference continued course Cree culture describe dialect early English ethnic evidence example fact Father foreground French given historical hunting important Indian indicate interest island James John land levels linguistic living Maliseets material meeting Métchif Micmacs mode Montagnais Moose Moose Factory mother tongue narrative native nature North northern noted observations Ojibwa Ontario pattern period person position possible practices present priests problem Québec question records REFERENCES regional reported represented request reserve respect response River Rousseau seems sentences social Sockabason speakers story structure Table talk territorial tion trade traditional translation Treaty tribal University verbe vowels whale whites