Arctic Origin and Domestic Development of Chinook Jargon
Looks at characteristics of the population that would have found the mixed language useful and how it developed through marriages between traders and Indigenous women.
Chapter from: Language Contact in the Arctic: Northern Pidgins and Contact Languages edited by Ernst Håkon Jahr and Ingvild Broch
As If, My Phone's Talking Dakota
Aspect and the Chipewyan Verb
Aspects of Certain Intransitivizing Postbases and of a Transitivizing Postbase in Labrador Inuttut
Aspects of Woods Cree Syntax
Aspectual Distinctions in Skwxwú7mesh
Assembly of First Nations (AFN) Youth Digitization Website Project
Assessing Anishinaabe Children's Narratives: An Ethnographic Exploration of Elders' Perspectives
Assessing First Nations Language Proficiency
Assimilation of the Inuit Languages and the Place of the Uvular Nasal
The Assiniboine
Assiniboine
Atautsikkut: When Two Actions Happen Together
Athabaskan Language Studies: Essays in Honor of Robert W. Young
Atlas of Canada [(3rd Edition)]: Aboriginal Population
The Atlas of Canada (6th edition, 1999-2009): Index of Aboriginal Language Continuity, 1996
The Atlas of Canada (6th edition): Aboriginal Languages by Community, 1996
The Atlas of Canada (6th edition): Index of Aboriginal Language Ability,1996
The Atlas of Canada: Aboriginal Population
Atuaqnik: The Duration and Demise of a Native Newspaper
Augmentation as Affixation in Athabaskan Languages
Augusta
Avataq Cultural Institute
Awasis Conference Convinces Teachers They're On Right Path
B.C. Educators Receive International Recognition [Buffet Award for Indigenous Leadership]
Comments on the International environmental organization Ecotrust on choosing a British Columbia educator, Jeannette Armstrong for the Buffet Award for Indigenous Leadership, and honouring four other finalists.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.22.
B.C. Natives Sing Praises of New Book
B.C.'s Master-Apprentice Language Program Handbook
Back From the Brink: Decolonizing Through the Restoration of Secwepemc Language, Culture, and Identity
Back from the (Nearly) Dead: Reviving Indigenous Languages across North America
Back to the Future: Recreating Natural Indigenous Language Learning Environments Through Language Nest Early Childhood Immersion Programs
Backgrounds of the Dialect Called Bungi
The Baffin Writer's Project
Looks at a project that encourages Inuit people to begin writing their stories and, in this way, pass on Inuit culture and language to the next generation.
Banks, People and Research: The Preservation and Use of Our Languages
Batoche Dinner - Royal Regiment of Canada - Toronto, ON
Baxwbakwalanusiwa: Un récit Haisla=Baxwbakwalanusiwa: A Haisla Story raconté par Gordon Robertson =as told by Gordon Robertson
BC First Peoples 12: Teacher Resource Guide
The Beaver Indians
Forms part of Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, v.10 (p. 201-293).
Beaver Texts; Beaver Dialects
Beginning Reading and Writing in the Cree Language “Y” Dialect
Bella Bella
The Bella Coola Indians [vols. 1 & 2]
Bending, Turning, and Growing: Cree Language, Laws, and Ceremony in Louise B. Halfe / Sky Dancer's The Crooked Good
Best Practices and Challenges in Mi’kmaq and Maliseet/Wolastoqi Language Immersion Programs
Beyond 94: Truth and Reconciliation in Canada
Beyond Everyone's Horizon Stand the Naskapi
Beyond Multilingual Education: The Cree of Waskaganish
Examines the implementation of a Cree language curriculum in the Waskaganish community.