Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 38Carleton University, 2006 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 83
The term ' Southern New England Algonquian ' ( SNEA ) was evidently first used in print ( and first posited as a linguistic subgroup ) by Frank Sie- bert ( 1975 : 442-443 ) . In this group , Siebert ( 1975 : 445-446 ) includes the same ...
The term ' Southern New England Algonquian ' ( SNEA ) was evidently first used in print ( and first posited as a linguistic subgroup ) by Frank Sie- bert ( 1975 : 442-443 ) . In this group , Siebert ( 1975 : 445-446 ) includes the same ...
Page 84
THE EVIDENCE FOR SNEA Several distinctive phonological developments unite the SNEA languages , to the point where it is safe to say that SNEA is indeed a genetic unit within Eastern Algonquian , and not merely an areal grouping .
THE EVIDENCE FOR SNEA Several distinctive phonological developments unite the SNEA languages , to the point where it is safe to say that SNEA is indeed a genetic unit within Eastern Algonquian , and not merely an areal grouping .
Page 99
Either way , as with the Intrusive Nasal , Abenaki Syncope cannot be seen as diagnostic for SNEA , nor , given its observed spread in the historic period , can it be used to define its different subgroups . SUBGROUPING WITHIN SNEA The ...
Either way , as with the Intrusive Nasal , Abenaki Syncope cannot be seen as diagnostic for SNEA , nor , given its observed spread in the historic period , can it be used to define its different subgroups . SUBGROUPING WITHIN SNEA The ...
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Contents
Heather Bliss | 11 |
Julie Brittain Carrie Dyck Yvan Rose Marguerite MacKenzie | 29 |
Clare Cook | 47 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Abenaki agreement Algonquian American animate appears Carleton University clause consonants context contrast Cree dialect direct discussion ê-conjunct Eastern endings English êsa event evidence evidential example fact final forms functions future given gives Goddard grammatical independent indicative Indian indicative inflection intention inverse Island John knowledge Kutenai land languages Linguistics Loup marked Massachusett meaning mode months n-suffixes names Narragansett negative noun object obviation obviative Ojibwe pattern Pentland person phonemic Plains Cree plural presented Press preverbs proximate reconstruction referent relation Salish sentence shared shows similar SNEA speaker speaking speech stem stories structure suffix thematic theme third person tion told types University utterances verb vowel Western Winnipeg Wolfart word-final