Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 28Carleton University, 1997 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 36
Number of Potawatomi language speakers by tribe/band. ... SPEAKERS 5 12 11
19 23 14 1 85 6% 14% 13% 22% 27% 16% 1% 100% The speaker status survey
The speaker status survey addressed the need for a modern, reliable estimate ...
Number of Potawatomi language speakers by tribe/band. ... SPEAKERS 5 12 11
19 23 14 1 85 6% 14% 13% 22% 27% 16% 1% 100% The speaker status survey
The speaker status survey addressed the need for a modern, reliable estimate ...
Page 37
The largest speech community is Forest County with 28 speakers, followed by the
Prairie Band with 21 speakers, and the Pokagon Band with 20. The other
communities all have under 10 speakers. The mean age bracket is 60-69 years.
The largest speech community is Forest County with 28 speakers, followed by the
Prairie Band with 21 speakers, and the Pokagon Band with 20. The other
communities all have under 10 speakers. The mean age bracket is 60-69 years.
Page 38
Number of Potawatomi speakers who "speak well". Not 30-49 50-59 60-69 70-79
80-89 90+ TRIBE/BAND known years years years years years yrs TOTAL Citizen
Pot. 1 - - - 1 - 2 Forest County - 5 - 18 Hannahville - - - - - - 0 Huron Band - - - - 1 ...
Number of Potawatomi speakers who "speak well". Not 30-49 50-59 60-69 70-79
80-89 90+ TRIBE/BAND known years years years years years yrs TOTAL Citizen
Pot. 1 - - - 1 - 2 Forest County - 5 - 18 Hannahville - - - - - - 0 Huron Band - - - - 1 ...
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Contents
SYLVIE BERBAUM | 14 |
LAURA BUSZARDWELCHER | 34 |
MARY ANN CORBIERE | 71 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
aboriginal Affairs agreement Algonquian American animal appears associated Band called Canada Canadian Carleton University century chiefs construction continued council Cree cultural dance Department described discourse discussion drawings effect elder English evidence example experience expression fact final fishing Garden ground human hunting Hydro important Indian indicates individual interests interpretative issues John Keating Lake land language learning Linguistics living means Mi'kmaq Nations Native needs nominal noted noun occur ofthe Ojibwa Ontario person political position possible predication present Press question recorded REFERENCES relation reported reserve River sense shared social society sound speak speakers story things Toronto totem traditional treaty understanding University values verb Walpole Island