Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 17Carleton University, 1986 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 93
6 How We Came to Be : The Algonquian Conference in Perspective GORDON M. DAY National Museum of Man and CHARLES A. BISHOP SUNY / Oswego The annual Algonquian Conference was spawned during the 1960s , that time of affluence , optimism ...
6 How We Came to Be : The Algonquian Conference in Perspective GORDON M. DAY National Museum of Man and CHARLES A. BISHOP SUNY / Oswego The annual Algonquian Conference was spawned during the 1960s , that time of affluence , optimism ...
Page 98
... Algonquians by linguists may be explained by the large number of linguistic papers and / or greater concern for comparative research required to establish phy- logenetic relationships and proto - Algonquian forms . To many lin- guists ...
... Algonquians by linguists may be explained by the large number of linguistic papers and / or greater concern for comparative research required to establish phy- logenetic relationships and proto - Algonquian forms . To many lin- guists ...
Page 210
... Algonquian languages ; and third , a bank of courses for students who have successfully completed either of the first two groups . While many of the calendared courses thus set forth have still to realize their full potential , the ...
... Algonquian languages ; and third , a bank of courses for students who have successfully completed either of the first two groups . While many of the calendared courses thus set forth have still to realize their full potential , the ...
Contents
Roger Spielmann and Bertha Chief | 313 |
John A Strong | 327 |
MarcAdélard Tremblay and Josée Thivierge | 343 |
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Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal Aboriginal language activities Algonquian animals appears aspect Band base called Canada Carleton University century clauses Conference course Cree culture dans describe dialect English evidence example fact Father foreground French given historical hunting important Indian indicate island James John land language levels linguistic living Maliseets material Micmacs mode Montagnais Moose Moose Factory mother tongue narrative native nature North northern noted observations Ojibwa Ontario pattern period person position possible practices present 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 whale whites