‘Lewis River language’ is Cowlitz Métis Chinuk Wawa
The Tenino dialect of Upper Chehalis Salish, spoken between old Fort Nisqually and the current Oakville, Washington Chehalis reservation, tells us something really interesting…
The Tenino dialect of Upper Chehalis Salish, spoken between old Fort Nisqually and the current Oakville, Washington Chehalis reservation, tells us something really interesting…
Here’s a heck of a further misinterpretation of a Chinuk Wawa-linked linguistic myth.
I’ve tracked down very little material in the Siuslaw language of the Oregon coast.
I always wondered what “rooty-toot-toots and rummy-tum=tums” are…
Historical cycles mutate how we interpret the written evidence of our past.
Previously, thanks to the kind help of Dr. Henry Zenk (Grand Ronde Tribes), we’ve seen a petition in Grand Ronde Chinuk Wawa for the sainthood of the Indigenous woman Kateri Tekakwitha, sent in… Continue reading
In the Chinuk Pipa alphabet of BC, they write < hlwima > for ‘strange; other’.
Joseph M. Snow (1850-1929), an immigrant of 1869, had a good memory for fluently spoken Chinuk Wawa, from his experiences with Native people in connection with the important question of land rights.
This is some valuable thinking from a colleague of mine.
Listen to a singer 100 years ago…and tell me if this is the famous “kʰánawi sán” song…