LINGUISTIC ARCHAEOLOGY: TREATY LANGUAGE (POINT NO POINT), PART 12
Education and health care…
Education and health care…
A hot lead, or a cold “should”er?
Prohibition, 1855 racially-segregated style.
Now to Okanagan/Spokane country, from The Coast…
A law talking about laws.Β
Previously on this blog:
Giving the translators a break at last! This is the shortest article in the Treaty of Point No Point.
(Warning: A disturbing scene to get language data from.)
This Article of the Point No Point treaty is one that I find relatively hard to translate, with its fancy literary nested-clauses style and its profusion of modals like ‘may’, ‘shall’, and ‘will’… Continue reading
Eyewitness testimonial specifying that Chinuk Wawa was already being spoken by Eastern Oregon Native people early in the settlement era.