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Gabriela Pérez Báez; Kristen L. Morio; Alison L. Lapointe; Daryl Baldwin – Language Documentation & Conservation, 2023
The National Breath of Life Archival Institute for Indigenous Languages has provided training in archive-based linguistic research for revitalization since 2011 (Baldwin et al. 2018). Four two-week workshops held biennially through 2017 provided training in phonetics, phonology, morphology, and syntax; on accessing archival documentation; and on…
Descriptors: Archives, Documentation, Language Maintenance, Language Research
Fitzgerald, Colleen M. – Language Documentation & Conservation, 2017
For language documentation to be sufficiently extensive to cover a given community's language practices (cf. Himmelmann 1998), then including verbal arts is essential to ensure the richness of that comprehensive record. The verbal arts span the creative and artistic uses of a given language by speakers, such as storytelling, songs, puns and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Verbal Communication, Phonology, Language Usage
Riestenberg, Katherine J. – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Second language (L2) learners of tone languages do not perceive and produce the different tones of the target language with equal ease. The most common explanation for these asymmetries is that acoustically salient tones are the easiest to learn. An alternative explanation is that tones are easiest to learn when they are highly frequent in the…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Intonation, Linguistic Input, Acoustics
Haynes, Erin Flynn – ProQuest LLC, 2010
This dissertation compares the phonetic and phonological features of adult non-speakers' productions of words in an endangered Native American language, Oregon Northern Paiute (also known, and hereafter referred to, as Numu), to productions by fluent speakers. The purpose of this comparison is two-fold. The first purpose is to examine the…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Language Dominance, Language Variation, Phonetics
Basham, Charlotte; Fathman, Ann – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2008
This paper focuses on how latent knowledge of an ancestral or heritage language affects subsequent acquisition by adults. The "latent speaker" is defined as an individual raised in an environment where the ancestral language was spoken but who did not become a speaker of that language. The study examines how attitudes, latent knowledge and…
Descriptors: Phonology, Adult Learning, Adult Students, Ukrainian
Holton, Gary – 2000
This article summarizes the development of the Tanacross practical orthography, highlighting the crucial differences between practical and technical orthography used in some linguistic publications. Three stages of Tanacross orthography are exemplified in research from the 1980s. A fourth stage is a hybrid of the second and third stages,…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, American Indian Languages, Language Maintenance, Phonology
Goodfellow, Anne – 2002
This paper examines the belief that as English rapidly infiltrates Native American cultures, school programs for teaching and maintaining native languages are not working. It suggests that Native American children who learn English first and their heritage languages second have difficulty learning the structures of their ancestral languages…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indians, Ethnicity, Grammar
Carpenter, Veronica – 1997
Across the United States, most American Indian children speak English as a first language. This fact allows a unique strategy for teaching an indigenous language as a second language. In all indigenous language programs, formal introduction to linguistics, specifically phonetics and phonology, can provide methods to help children "unlearn" aspects…
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indian Languages, Elementary Secondary Education, English
Saville-Troike, Muriel; McCreedy, Lynn A. – 1980
Interviews with 108 Navajo children from bilingual first grade classes on Navajo reservations were recorded. Analysis of the interviews focused on phonological, grammatical, and lexical features that show a systematic variation within the speech of individuals or between individuals. Variable features were compared with background factors such as…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, American Indians, Background, Bilingualism