Monthly Archive: November, 2024

Cortes Island Museum website: Jargon story and photo

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For educational purposes only, I’d like to share an exciting find of a Chinook Jargon story from Cortes Island, British Columbia.

So many Métis words in interior PNW languages (Part 12: Umatilla Sahaptin — breads and rooms)

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Umatilla Sahaptin is a language of tribal people who met non-Native newcomers fairly early…

Where was Camp 16, BC?

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A couple of the Chinuk Pipa letters that we’ve found, written by Indigenous people of British Columbia, are datelined “Camp 16” in 1893. Ever heard of the place?

Notes from Yahooskin Northern Paiute (Klamath Tribes)

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One Pacific Northwest language that I’ve had a harder time finding reference materials on is Northern Paiute.

1895: Real-world Northern Chinook Jargon (An apology for “turning Métis”?)

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Nah, we’re talking about dysgraphia!

I visited the graves of PNW linguistic pioneers in Spokane

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At Mount Saint Michaels in Hillyard (Spokane), Washington, this week:

“The Chucks” in 20th century S Central BC

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Suzanne Simard’s book “Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest” (New York: Alfred A Knopf, 2021) is a very good read if you’re interested in forest ecology and such.

Boas 1892: Many discoveries in a short article (Part 23: to vomit)

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Look what else emerged from Prof. Franz Boas’s brief 1892 article on “The Chinook Jargon“…

A correction to H. Rubenstein on Father Le Jeune’s “diary entries”

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I don’t care to engage with the obviously political goal of its author, but his scholarship is shoddy and needs correcting…

1861, California: Cheap pantaloons + West Coast CPE (Chinese Pidgin English)

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The other big West Coast pidgin language that everyone was familiar with…