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Wyman, Leisy T. – International Multilingual Research Journal, 2013
Few studies ethnographically detail how Indigenous young people's mobility intersects with sociolinguistic transformation in an interconnected world. Drawing on a decade-long study of youth and language contact, I analyze Yup'ik young people's migration in relation to emerging language ideologies and patterns of language use in "Piniq,"…
Descriptors: Youth, Alaska Natives, Language Patterns, Ideology
Pinson, Thomas M. – 1990
A study of Dakota Sioux presents evidence for Possessor Ascension. In this construction, a nominal that is semantically a possessor is syntactically not a constituent of the noun phrase but a constituent of the clause. The report first discusses the universal characterization of Possessor Ascension in the framework of relational grammar, and…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Research
Ichihashi, Kumiko – 1991
The distribution of Hualapai auxiliary verbs "-yu" and "-wi" can not be explained only by the presence or absence of an object, or by the active or stative feature of the matrix verb. It can be explained in terms of transitivity, in that "-wi" corresponds to high transitivity and "-yu" to low transitivity of…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Research
Chung, Young Hee – 1989
A study of Karok, an American Indian language spoken in northern California, provides an argument for CV theory over moraic theory from compensatory lengthening. In a previous study, moraic theory is argued to be superior to CV phonology in accounting for compensatory lengthening; it is shown here that compensatory lengthening in Karok cannot be…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Rodier, Dominique – 1989
It is proposed that some reduplication processes found in Kwakiutl, a native language of British Columbia, can be explained in a very illuminating way within a moraic theory. It is argued that the cases of so-called reduplication found in Kwakiutl should be viewed as the result of a copying process triggered by the moraic requirement of some…
Descriptors: Affixes, American Indian Languages, Foreign Countries, Language Patterns

Rosenwald, Lawrence – College English, 1998
Offers a sustained linguistic analysis of James Fenimore Cooper's "The Last of the Mohicans." Finds that, because Cooper's technical blunders and moral limitations are always in view, they are revelatory. Suggests that no American author has gotten more things wrong about languages; but no one has dramatized more about how languages…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Languages, Content Analysis, Higher Education

Krauss, Michael E.; Leer, Jeff – 1981
A historical-comparative study of the sonorant system of Athabaskan, Eyak, and Tlingit, American Indian languages of Alaska, is presented. In this study, sonorants are considered as a class rather than as a constituent of the general consonant group. An opening section looks at the development of the generally recognized Proto-Athabaskan (PA)…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian Languages, Athapascan Languages, Consonants

Bayles, Kathryn A.; Harris, Gail A. – Journal of American Indian Education, 1982
As part of a training program for Native Americans in speech and hearing sciences, University of Arizona speech-language pathologists conducted speech-language screenings of 583 Papago Indian Reservation children. This report presents screening results, describes patterns of English usage among this population and discusses the differentiation of…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Audiology, Dialect Studies

Ahenakew, Freda – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 1985
Illustrates how major Cree language instruction books are not idiomatically and syntactically correct. Believes problems could be overcome if native speakers using spontaneous, everyday Cree would develop appropriate teaching materials based on traditional and contemporary family life and community activities. (NEC)
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Canada Natives, Elementary Secondary Education
Stark, Thomas C. Smith; Garcia, Fermin Tapia – 1986
An analysis of Amuzgo, a language within the Otomanguean family of Mexico, suggests that it is an active-static language with patterns similar but not parallel to those of Chocho. In the report, data on the characteristics of Chocho are summarized, theory and research on active-static languages is reviewed, and the data on Amuzgo are presented.…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Articulation (Speech), Contrastive Linguistics, Descriptive Linguistics