At one time before European contact Indigenous groups flourished on the American continent and maintained their ideas of conveying knowledge, history, and beliefs through the oral tradition. It is widely concluded that hundreds of Native languages were spoken to convey the aspects related above, which were unique and specific to each individual tribe. With the colonization of the American continent by European peoples, came the beginning of the end of the Indian way of life. Because of this reality and circumstances that were yet to be endured by Indigenous groups, the destruction of many Native languages also occurred over time. Presently, only a few hundred Indigenous languages have survived. In the effort at preserving some of the remain...
In 2018, UNESCO predicted that by the end of this century, between 50-90% of the world’s 6,000-7,000...
Regardless of which genre, style, or medium the authors chose, they all seem to be of a similar mind...
The Southwest Oregon Research Project, initiated by members of the Coquille Indian tribe broke groun...
This is a documentation of (1) Ojibwa language loss at Keweenaw Bay from 1600 to 1976, (2) efforts m...
This paper presents a preliminary report on a large cache of language documentation pertaining to Oj...
There was a time in the Americas when many very different languages were spoken by the diverse nativ...
During the early 1900s, a number of oral narratives were collected from speakers of Tohono O\u27odha...
Published as Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics, Special Volume on Native American Languag...
This paper reports work on two sets of legacy materials for Tohono O'odham, a Uto-Aztecan language s...
This case study examines the Ojibwe Language Program created by the Nay Ah Shing faculty to help the...
Languages are disappearing at an alarming rate from around the world. Native America is experiencing...
According to Lyle Campbell, author of American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Nativ...
Published as Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics, Special Volume Dedicated to the Indigenou...
This study examines the history and culture of the Odawa people from their prehistory until the pres...
The purposes of this project are to describe the importance of the group name Klamath to the Klamath...
In 2018, UNESCO predicted that by the end of this century, between 50-90% of the world’s 6,000-7,000...
Regardless of which genre, style, or medium the authors chose, they all seem to be of a similar mind...
The Southwest Oregon Research Project, initiated by members of the Coquille Indian tribe broke groun...
This is a documentation of (1) Ojibwa language loss at Keweenaw Bay from 1600 to 1976, (2) efforts m...
This paper presents a preliminary report on a large cache of language documentation pertaining to Oj...
There was a time in the Americas when many very different languages were spoken by the diverse nativ...
During the early 1900s, a number of oral narratives were collected from speakers of Tohono O\u27odha...
Published as Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics, Special Volume on Native American Languag...
This paper reports work on two sets of legacy materials for Tohono O'odham, a Uto-Aztecan language s...
This case study examines the Ojibwe Language Program created by the Nay Ah Shing faculty to help the...
Languages are disappearing at an alarming rate from around the world. Native America is experiencing...
According to Lyle Campbell, author of American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Nativ...
Published as Coyote Papers: Working Papers in Linguistics, Special Volume Dedicated to the Indigenou...
This study examines the history and culture of the Odawa people from their prehistory until the pres...
The purposes of this project are to describe the importance of the group name Klamath to the Klamath...
In 2018, UNESCO predicted that by the end of this century, between 50-90% of the world’s 6,000-7,000...
Regardless of which genre, style, or medium the authors chose, they all seem to be of a similar mind...
The Southwest Oregon Research Project, initiated by members of the Coquille Indian tribe broke groun...