1793-1825: Why Métis speech dominated the PNW Interior before Chinook Jargon did
Here’s an easy way to see why it was that Métis speech was the “lingua franca” of the Interior Pacific Northwest, until Chinook Jargon took over.
Here’s an easy way to see why it was that Métis speech was the “lingua franca” of the Interior Pacific Northwest, until Chinook Jargon took over.
We know that ‘dog’ is an insult in many Pacific NW Indigenous languages…
Boston trader Joseph Ingraham (1762-1800) spent a couple of seasons in Haida Gwaii and in Nuuchahnulth country, at a time when numerous Euro-American vessels had already become a common sight…
New details about Chiefs Louis and Johnny Chiliheetza’s visit to see the King of England and the Pope…
The newest-named Washington State Ferry vessel, the MV Wishkah, got me thinking.
I received a copy of the excellent book “Language and Culture in Aboriginal Australia”, thank to the wonderful Lingoblog…
One of the first newspapers in Washington would seem to have lost little time indulging in April Fool’s pranks…
Eric Deane Sismey (1893-?) was a post-frontier surveyor in the Okanagan country of British Columbia, so his quotation of Chinook Jargon from a Native man seems worth paying attention to.
I have a simple insight to share today.
There’s very little going on here, linguistically. (But be sure to read on!)