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Purdy, John; Hausman, Blake; Ortiz, Simon – Studies in American Indian Literatures, 2000
Pueblo author Simon Ortiz discusses Indigenous authors' use of their native language as a form of self-assertion, pointing out how African literature drives the decolonizing impulse in literature today. Use of the dominant language would reach a larger audience but would also make transmission of colonizers' cultural assumptions unavoidable while…
Descriptors: Acculturation, African Literature, American Indian Languages, American Indian Literature
Reyhner, John – 1999
Dr. Joshua Fishman, a world renowned sociolinguist and expert on endangered languages, postulates a continuum of eight stages of language loss for indigenous languages. The most-endangered languages are in stage 8 and only have a few elderly speakers. In stage 7 only adults beyond child-bearing age still speak the tribal language. In stage 6 there…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Bilingualism, Cultural Maintenance, Diglossia

Grobsmith, Elizabeth S. – Anthropological Linguistics, 1979
Lakota Indians use five speaking styles--formal and informal Lakota and three types of nonstandard English. Choice of style is determined by the social context and the individuals. Since the styles are used to meet specific linguistic and social needs, they are likely to be maintained simultaneously. (PMJ)
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indians, Language Research, Language Styles
Wolfram, Walt; And Others – 1979
The aim of this study was to describe the varieties of English used in two American Indian communities and to examine the effect of language diversity on the acquisition of certain educational skills. The field work was carried out in two Puebloan communities in New Mexico, San Juan and Laguna. The description of selected linguistic structures and…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Educationally Disadvantaged
Silver, Shirley; Miller, Wick R. – 1997
This book introduces the general reader to the mosaic of American Indian languages and cultures as they exist in time and space, and supplies limited technical linguistic orientation to encourage further exploration of language interrelationships, cultures, and other ways of knowing. Chapter 1 provides an overview of the status, diversity, and…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indian Languages, Descriptive Linguistics
Bauman, Richard – 1974
The purpose of this essay is to expand the conceptual content of folkloric performance as a communicative phenomenon, as spoken art. Performance is seen as representing an interpretive frame, whose nature may vary. This framing is accomplished through the use of culturally conventionalized metacommunication (communication about communication),…
Descriptors: Allegory, American Indian Languages, Anthropology, Ballads

Ahenakew, Freda – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 1985
Illustrates how major Cree language instruction books are not idiomatically and syntactically correct. Believes problems could be overcome if native speakers using spontaneous, everyday Cree would develop appropriate teaching materials based on traditional and contemporary family life and community activities. (NEC)
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Canada Natives, Elementary Secondary Education
Palmer, Scott – 1997
During the 20th century there has been a widespread pattern of language shift among the indigenous communities of the United States and Canada. The language-of-work hypothesis posits that if the national language is used as the language of work for virtually all jobs in a minority-language community, the national language will, within a few…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Languages, Attitude Change, Economic Factors
Burnaby, Barbara – 1997
This paper presents personal reflections on factors in the preservation and stabilization of North American indigenous languages. All indigenous languages in North America are in danger of being lost. Linguistic and cultural minority communities must control the institutions that affect their lives if there is to be significant and sustainable…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Canada Natives, Change Strategies
Makah Cultural and Research Center, Neah Bay, WA. – 1979
The book presents the Makah alphabet decided upon in a public workshop held by the Makah Language Program in 1978, before which there was no standard Makah orthography. The 10 vowels and 34 consonants of the alphabet are presented in relation to English sounds. The book groups vowels sounds together but devotes a page to each consonant telling how…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indians, Consonants, Elementary Secondary Education

Berlin, Brent; And Others – 1969
Attempts have been made by linguists and anthropologists to reconstruct aspects of culture history by using synchronically derived lexical data. Related to this concern with culture history is one which attempts to explore the diachronic processes of lexical change over time. As a result of a comparative survey of Tzeltal and Tzotzil…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Anthropological Linguistics, Anthropology, Botany

Carney, Ginny – WICAZO SA Review, 1997
Examines the history of White-Indian relationships in Latin America and North America and the corresponding fluctuations in loanword borrowing into English from Native American languages. Explores 20th-century attitudes toward Native Americans and the impact of these attitudes on borrowing today, particularly in Alaska where Natives are resisting…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Alaska Natives, American Indian History, American Indian Languages
Bielenberg, Brian – 1999
As indigenous communities begin to develop language revitalization programs, they inevitably must face the decision of whether to incorporate written forms of their historically oral languages into their efforts. This paper argues that as indigenous people go about the decision-making process, they must be aware of the implications of relying on a…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Case Studies, Community Attitudes
Medicine, Bea – 1981
A brief overview of the status of language use in Native American communities reveals that while approximately 206 different languages and language dialects persist today, an estimated 49 languages have fewer than 10 speakers aged 50 or over, while 6 of these languages have more than 10,000 speakers of all generations. That these languages persist…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, American Indians, Biculturalism
Boehmler, Eileen – Montana Association of Language Teachers Bulletin, 1979
A survey is presented of the Blackfeet language that is used in the Browning area of Montana. The purpose of the survey is to determine the extent to which the language is spoken and passed on at home, and the degree of interest in the language among the young people. The results are presented along with comments where appropriate. Generally, it…
Descriptors: Adolescents, American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indian Languages