The Arapaho Language is divided into five primary analytical areas on phonology, inflectional morphology, derivational morphology, usage, complex clauses, and syntax. Under these headings an additional 21 subfields and numerous grammatical rules are also provided. One feature that makes this book particularly beneficial is its extensive use of narrative texts, historical accounts, and life experiences of several individuals as examples for discussing how grammatical rules work within the language, which also provides helpful examples of the subtleties, complexity, and flexibility used by Arapaho speakers that differ from other Algonquian languages. Although it is clear that this book is written primarily for a linguistic audience, the quant...
The American Indian Oral History Manual offers a clear, succinct, and practical approach to guide an...
This thick book is the first supplement to the Handbook of Amazonian languages (henceforward, HAL) t...
In a twist on assimilation, many boarding-school students used the English language, a primary tool ...
The Arapaho Language is divided into five primary analytical areas on phonology, inflectional morpho...
Although biographies have long been a staple in Plains Indian ethnology, this profile of an Arapaho ...
This wide-ranging volume, appropriately dedicated to the pioneering linguist and tireless teacher of...
Let’s Speak Chickasaw: Chikashshanompa’ Kilanompoli’ is a landmark achievement in Chickasaw language...
This work presents a body of edited ethnographic field notes on the Comanches, the majority of it fr...
Maipure is an Arawakan language that became extinct before the end of the eighteenth century. Former...
Organized as a series of imagined conversations between Virginia Sutter and her great-grandmother ...
Mithun estimates that at least 300 distinct languages may have been spoken in North America on the e...
In a twist on assimilation, many boarding school students used the English language, a primary tool ...
Among my treasured possessions is a photograph of three small children dressed in Indian regalia. ...
Ruth Spack\u27s thoroughly researched study of English education in Indian boarding schools goes bey...
Prior to resettlement and assimilation, Plains Apaches had sophisticated knowledge of the plants tha...
The American Indian Oral History Manual offers a clear, succinct, and practical approach to guide an...
This thick book is the first supplement to the Handbook of Amazonian languages (henceforward, HAL) t...
In a twist on assimilation, many boarding-school students used the English language, a primary tool ...
The Arapaho Language is divided into five primary analytical areas on phonology, inflectional morpho...
Although biographies have long been a staple in Plains Indian ethnology, this profile of an Arapaho ...
This wide-ranging volume, appropriately dedicated to the pioneering linguist and tireless teacher of...
Let’s Speak Chickasaw: Chikashshanompa’ Kilanompoli’ is a landmark achievement in Chickasaw language...
This work presents a body of edited ethnographic field notes on the Comanches, the majority of it fr...
Maipure is an Arawakan language that became extinct before the end of the eighteenth century. Former...
Organized as a series of imagined conversations between Virginia Sutter and her great-grandmother ...
Mithun estimates that at least 300 distinct languages may have been spoken in North America on the e...
In a twist on assimilation, many boarding school students used the English language, a primary tool ...
Among my treasured possessions is a photograph of three small children dressed in Indian regalia. ...
Ruth Spack\u27s thoroughly researched study of English education in Indian boarding schools goes bey...
Prior to resettlement and assimilation, Plains Apaches had sophisticated knowledge of the plants tha...
The American Indian Oral History Manual offers a clear, succinct, and practical approach to guide an...
This thick book is the first supplement to the Handbook of Amazonian languages (henceforward, HAL) t...
In a twist on assimilation, many boarding-school students used the English language, a primary tool ...