Ikta Dale McCreery yaka t’ɬap (Part 8: I’m not dead yeeeeeeeeeeeeeet)
Our BC friend Dale McCreery has shared quite a few of his personal encounters with Chinuk Wawa in the last several years.
Our BC friend Dale McCreery has shared quite a few of his personal encounters with Chinuk Wawa in the last several years.
I’ve previously shown you that Americans were called Boston by Indigenous people of the Northwest Coast, and by French-Canadians.
When one of the last speakers of endangered Nicola Athabaskan thought it was the end of his life, he spoke Chinuk Wawa!
Howdy from Kamloops, BC, where I’m doing a bit of Chinook stuff today!
Sometimes Chinook Jargon can be downright steampunk!
I posted about the Kamloops residential school yesterday — now here’s something about a well-remembered figure connected with that.
Said to be a 1930’s photo by George Meeres, this shot of the Kamloops residential school entrance surprised me.
A word of Lower Chehalis Salish from elder Emma Luscier in 1941 ultimately shows traces of Chinuk Wawa.
When Alaska was still a newly acquired territory of the USA (since 1867), most Americans to be found there were located in its southeast panhandle.
Most unexpectedly, we find Native people in Oregon doing a minstrel show in Chinuk Wawa…