Poetic BC family history and Chinook
The view I have of this book unfortunately doesn’t tell me the page numbers, so let’s call these “Snippet 1” and “Snippet 2”.
The view I have of this book unfortunately doesn’t tell me the page numbers, so let’s call these “Snippet 1” and “Snippet 2”.
Frontier-era Eastern Oregon?
A woman visitor’s view of “how it’s made” on the lower Fraser River involves a bit of legitimate Chinuk Wawa, for local colour.
A turn-of-the-century convention of Washington State women’s clubs has a significant Chinuk Wawa component!
Attention gearheads!
Pidgins as street languages in the late frontier period…
So wonderful: a local girl tells about Chinuk Pipa shorthand in a national kids’ magazine.
An awkwardly prosecuted case of illegal liquor sales to Indigenous women (a classic colonialist prohibition) near Kamloops carries plenty of implied information about the post-frontier Nicola Valley language situation…
Short and sweet…