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The Arctic Indigenous Language Initiative: Assessment, Promotion, and Collaboration
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
Assessing the Impact of Total Immersion on Cherokee Language Revitalization: A Culturally Responsive, Participatory Approach
Bering Sea and Arctic Coast Eskimos of Alaska
Dictionary of the Chinook Jargon: Indian Trade Language of the North Pacific Coast
Lexicon of Chinook-English and English-Chinook for a mixed trade language spoken in the Pacific Northwest.
Chapter from Guide to the Province of British Columbia for 1877-8.
Documenting and Maintaining Native American Languages for the 21st Century: The Indiana University Model
The French Half-Breeds of the Northwest
Content and language reflect the attitudes of the times.
Forms part of Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution ... for the Year 1879.
See pages 309-328.
Gifts of Master-Apprenticeship: Development of the Revitalizing Endangered Indigenous Languages (REIL) Certificates
Haida Texts: Masset Dialect
The Indians
Indigenous Youth and Language Revitalization
Innovative Training Opportunities: The NSF/AILDI Collaboration for Indigenous Language Documentation
An Issue of Culture in Educating American Indian Youth
'"Keep the Languages Alive" with Elders, Teachers, Advocates, and Linguists: AILDI's Balancing Act in Efforts to Maintain and Revitalize Endangered Languages.
Kowassaaton Ilhaalos: Let us Hear Koasati: Developing and Implementing the Koasati Language Project
Lessons in Immersion Instruction From the American Indian Language Development Institute (AILDI)
Missionaries and American Indian Languages
Mothertongue: Incorporating Theatre of the Oppressed into Language Restoration Movements
My AILDI Experience
My Story: Danny Lopez
Native Educators: Interface with Culture and Language in Schooling
Native Language Revitalization: Keeping the Languages Alive and Thriving
The Northwest Coast
The Pacific Eskimo
People of the River: The Subsistence Economy of the Han, Athabaskan People of the Upper Yukon River
Remarks on the Indian Languages of North America
Running the Gauntlet of an Indigenous Language Program
School-Community-University Collaborations: The American Indian Language Development Institute
Scientific Dogma or Indigenous Geographic Knowledge: Was America a Land Without History Prior to Scientific Contact?
Sign Language Among North American Indians Compared with that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes
Sketch of the Klamath Language of Southern Oregon
T-Ni'ok c T-himdag 'o wud T-Gewkdag: "Our Language and Our Way of Life is Our Strength"
The Takelma Language of South-Western Oregon
Looks at a language study from material gathered from Mrs. Frances Johnson, the last fluent speaker of the Takelma language. Chapter from Handbook of American Indian Languages. Part 2 edited by Franz Boas.