Introduction to the Cultures of North American Aboriginal Peoples Languages of North America.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Earliest Americans
Advertisements

Native American Tribes
Chapter 2 Native Americans of North America p
Native Americans SOLs - USI.3a and 3b.
Ch. 14: The Americas P. 383.
Native Americans Power Point Presentation By Kris Rone & Sara Wagner.
What was life like in the Native American societies that developed in North America?
Native American Cultures SW, Pacific Coast, Great Plains.
10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt
200 First Americans Culture Areas Great Civilizations Iroquois Final Jeopardy
CHAPTER ONE THE ATLANTIC WORLD TO SECTION 1 Early Native settlement:  Migrated from Asia over the land bridge through the Bering Strait  Population.
Early People of North America LESSON 2: THE SOUTHWESTERN PEOPLE.
Early Native American Tribes
Aim: How did Geography shape the lives of the Native-American cultures?  Do now: How did Native-American tribes differ based on their geographic location?
The Mississippian Culture was the last pre-historic development in North America, thriving from about 1000 AD until the arrival of European explorers.
Native American Cultures
The Earliest Americans
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Cultural Regions More Cultural Regions.
North American Peoples— Ch. 1, Sect. 3 Main Idea Many different cultures lived in North America before the arrival of the Europeans. Key Terms PuebloDrought.
Chapter 1 The First Americans Prehistory
Unit #2: Pre-Columbian Civilizations & Native Americans.
Pre Columbian America. North America Greenland Canada United States Mexico.
Pre-Columbus- Exploration Native Americans North American.
Native American Tribes
The First Americans. A long time ago North America was very different from the way it is today. There were no highways, cars, or cities. There were no.
Ch. 1 Sec. 2. THE WEST  Mesoamerican civilizations helped shaped Natchez society.  By the time Europeans arrived in the Americas, Native Americans were.
NATIVE AMERICAN SOCIETIES Chapter 1, Section 2
Mi’kmaq Studies 10.  Eskimo-aleut  Spoken in Arctic regions, Alaska, Labrador, and Greenland  Language of Inuit is Inuktitut  Athabaskan  Spoken.
An introduction to American Indians L/O To understand that the tribes of American Indians in the United States are diverse.
Native American Culture Areas map Step by step directions.
Warm Up Question How do you think the people of North America adapted to their environment?
Chapter 16, part of section 2 Life in North America Pages
The Native American World
Why do you think Native American tribes developed different cultures?
Chapter 2: Native Americans
American Indians developed unique cultures with many different ways of life. American Indian tribes and nations can be classified into cultural groups.
North and Northwest Culture Areas Arctic Long, cold winters and short summers Inuit peoples in present-day Alaska and Canada Aleut peoples in Alaska Fished.
North American Peoples— Ch. 1, Sect. 3 Key Terms PuebloDrought AdobeFederation.
Native American Art By Cyna Gehring. Regions Arctic- Inupiaq, Alaskan Yup’ik, and the Inuit Arctic- Inupiaq, Alaskan Yup’ik, and the Inuit Northwest Coast-
The American Indians.
A Web Quest presentation designed for use with upper elementary students, studying United States Social Studies. Designed by Susan Bough.
The First Americans.
Chapter 16, part of section 2 Life in North America Pages
Ерменбаева Г.К. Костанайский государственный университет им. А. Байтурсынова.
The People of North America. The People of the Far North The world of the Inuits, meaning “Humans” Others called them Eskimos, meaning “Eaters.
The Native American Experience (Pre-Columbus) America’s History Chapter 1 p
The Earliest Americans
Aboriginal Culture & Language
EARLY NATIVE AMERICANS
of what is now referred to as the United States
Native Americans.
The Important Thing about the Native Americans of Long Ago
BELL-RINGER.
Native American Cultures
Aboriginal Culture & Language
Mi’kmaq Culture.
Chapter 1: The World Before the Opening of the Atlantic
Chapter 1: The World Before the Opening of the Atlantic
11 September 2014 Do now: Write a min of 6 lines. What do you know about the events that took place on ? What was America’s response? What impact.
North American Peoples
Please Pull out your Growth Mindset journal
Native Americans.
Native Americans American History 8.
Native Americans.
The New World Before 1492.
World History B February 3-7.
Native Americans.
Societies of North America
North America Before Colonization
Native American Location and Regions
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to the Cultures of North American Aboriginal Peoples Languages of North America

► Prior to the arrival of Europeans in the 15th century:  1,000 – 2,000 languages and dialects in North America (Driver)  Generalizations ► Very difficult ► At least 7 different language families ► All oral (no written forms prior to the 18th century) ► Modern written forms  Most use the Latin alphabet  Cherokee  Inuit/Cree/Ojibwa syllabic systems

Sequoyah’s (c ) Cherokee syllabic system

Cree syllabic system developed by James Evans, missionary in the 1840s. Modified in the 1870s by James Peck for Inuktitut

Language Families of North America ► The number varies according to the expert  Driver: Seven plus numerous isolates and thus far unidentified languages ► The geographic distribution of language families reveals something about the historic movement of peoples

Language Families (1) ► Eskimo-Aleut  Restricted to the Arctic Region  Inuktitut ► Spoken from western Alaska to Greenland ► Continuum of dialects  Yupik (Western Eskimo) ► Spoken in southwestern Alaska ► Four languages, including Siberia  Grammatically quite similar but significant differences in vocabulary and phonetics  Aleut ► Spoken on the Aleutian Islands ► 2 dialects (eastern and western)

Language Families (2) ► Athapaskan / Athabascan  Primarily found from the interior Alaska to the Yukon and Northwest Territories, along the Northwest Coast.  Important outliers ► California  Northwestern corner of the region including the Tolowa, Hupa and a group of southern Athabascan languages) ► Southwest  Navajo/Navaho  Apache ► Both groups probably arrived sometime in the 15th century ► This is based both on linguistic similarity and archaeological evidence.

Language Families (3) ► Algonquian  Widely distributed language family  Eastern Sub-arctic ► Cree, Ojibwa  Northeastern Woodlands ► Huron, Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, Delaware  Great Lakes ► Fox-Sauk, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Pottawatomi  Southeastern Woodlands ► Muskogee (Creek), Natchez, Tunica

Language Families (4) ► Siouan  Also widely distributed  Northeastern Woodlands ► Seneca, Cayuga, Mohawk, Oneida and Onondaga (Iroquois) ► Huron  Northern Great Plains ► Crow, Dakota, Hidatsa, Mandan, Omaha, Osage  Southeastern Woodlands/Southern Great Plains ► Caddo, Wichita, Pawnee, Arikara, Yuchi

Language Families (5) ► Hokan  Much more restricted in its distribution  California, Baja California, Mexico ► Yuman, Pomo, Chumash, Washo ► Penutian  California, Northwest Coast, Great Basin, Southwest, Central America ► Yokuts, Miwok, Chinook, Tsimshian, Nez Perce, Klamath, Zuñi, Maya

Language Families (6) ► Uto-Aztecan  Great Basin ► Ute, Paiute, Mono  California ► Mission Groups (Lusieño, Cupeño)  Southwest ► Hopi, Pima-Papago, Tiwa/Tewa/Towa  Mexico ► Nahuatl (Aztec) ► Important Language Isolates  Yuki (California) ► Yuki, Wappo  Keres (Southwest) ► Eastern and Western (Laguna, Acoma)  Salish (Northwest Coast)

Features (1) ► Highly variable grammars  Singular/dual/plural  Male/Female forms of speech ► Sioux  Agglutinating ► Word phrases  Noun/Verb classification ► Hopi  Verbs indicate short duration  Nouns indicate long duration ► Nootka  No distinction between nouns and verbs

Features (2)  Tenses ► Hopi has no tenses  Aspect  Validity ► Speaker reporting on a completed or ongoing action or event ► Speaker expects that an action or event will take place ► Action or event is predictable or regular  Clause linkage ► Characteristics of two or more verbs ► Earlier/later/simultaneous ► Physical distance = chronological distance  "After long and careful study and analysis, the Hopi language is seen to contain no words, grammatical forms, constructions or expressions that refer directly to what we call "time." or to past, present, or future, or to enduring or lasting, or to motion as kinematic rather than dynamic (i.e. as a continuous translation in space and time rather than as an exhibition of dynamic effort in a certain process), or that even refer to space in such a way as to exclude that element of extension or existence that we call "time," and so by implication leave a residue that could be referred to as "time." Hence, the Hopi language contains no reference to "time," either explicit or implicit." (Whorf BL (1956) Language, Thought & Reality. MIT Press: Cambridge p. 57-8)  Gender/Plural ► Navajo makes no distinction between he/she/it/theirs ► No plural forms for nouns