T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
413.1 | Word captures essence of meaning? | CHUCKM::MURRAY | Chuck Murray | Fri Sep 25 1987 19:27 | 6 |
| "qarasaasiaq" = "computer," eh? Is it just coincidental that we at
DEC use "QAR" (Quality Assurance Report) to denote our internal
software problem reporting system?
Maybe the Eskimos' knowledge of high tech is more advanced than
we suspect (:-).
|
413.2 | Lang of the Month | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Men's sauna in corporation baths | Fri Oct 02 1987 06:11 | 19 |
| Inuit was the 'Language of the Month' in _Language Monthly_ (Aug
1986). One of the more notable things about Inuit Languages
(two sub-familys; Aleut (or Unangan) and Inuit - including
Inupiaq (or Inuk) and Yupik (or Yuk)), is the large number of
demonstratives - about 30 in Aleut and Yupik. So:
hakan = that one up there (e.g. a bird in the sky)
gakun = that one in there (e.g. in an igloo)
uman = this one unseen (e.g. something smelt, heard, felt)
Inuit knowldge of high tech tends to involve stringing umpteen
words together: nalunaer-asuar-ta-ut (that by which one communicates
habitually) means telegraph. I suppose they don't have radio
up there.
I'll send photocopies of the article to anyone who wants to take
up the offer in .0.
bob
|
413.3 | First Air caters to the Inuit population | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Pardon, is this your bar of soap? | Tue Nov 03 1987 12:27 | 5 |
| Those wishing to see Inuktitut script can simply fly from Boston
to Ottawa on the only commercial airline serving the route, First
Air. (Where you go if DECair is full.) Much of their business
is running the arctic route, places like Frobisher Bay and Resolute.
Their airline safety cards and schedules are trilingual.
|
413.4 | What does it look like? | GRNDAD::STONE | Roy | Tue Nov 03 1987 17:43 | 7 |
| Re: .3
> Those wishing to see Inuktitut script...
Does the language have its own equivalent of a written alphabet
or is it a transliteration into the Roman alphabet?
|
413.5 | Squiggly | WELSWS::MANNION | Bonnets so red | Wed Nov 04 1987 04:20 | 6 |
| Bob Knowles once sent me a copy of an article from Modern Languages
(I think) which shows Inuktitut script. It's completely different
to anything I've seen before, and is based, if I remember correctly
on an Indian script.
Phillip
|
413.6 | Cree, for one | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Men's sauna in corporation baths | Wed Nov 04 1987 08:16 | 14 |
| Cree.
To quote a bit of the article:
"Inuit [I imagine Inuktitut is just the adjective derived from the
people's name] has been written in a somewhat chaotic variety of
scripts and altered scripts.... In Canada, the Cree alphabet ...
is used beside the Latin alphabet."
Incidentally, here's a tidbit from the same article that would
fit in the Intriguing Etymologies note: the term Eskimo is a
pejorative combination of Cree words meaning `eater of raw meet'.
Bob
|
413.7 | Does it look like APL? | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Nov 04 1987 10:06 | 15 |
| If the script looks like triangles, little circles with tails,
and such like sans-serif squiggles, then it is the syllabary
(one symbol per syllable) invented (I believe by a missionary
to the Cree). The only "native" writing method I know of in
North America is that invented for Cherokee by Sequoia, and that
invention was a clear case of stimulus diffusion: he knew that
there were ways to write, and had seen printed English--he just
did not know how that system worked, and so invented a syllabary.
Such systems have been invented many times, an alphabet only once,
and even there the alphabet's origin is a syllabary. That method
is thus more "natural", and so often prefered by those who have to
come up with a written form of a hitherto unwritten language.
-John Bishop
|
413.8 | So that's where they've gone since the crash... | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Thu Nov 12 1987 09:49 | 2 |
| Yupik? Is that a person who wears tailored suits with yellow ties
and suspenders, drives a BMW and lives in Kodiak?
|
413.9 | One common language | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Sun Feb 14 1988 00:51 | 8 |
| re: .0
About 20 years ago, I met a fellow linguistics graduate student who
came from Greenland. When he was in the United States to study, he
travelled to Point Barrow, Alaska -- as far West as you can go in the
United States -- and discovered that he had no trouble communicating
in his native Eskimo with the locals.
|
413.10 | You'd better check your compass! | GRNDAD::STONE | Roy | Mon Feb 22 1988 23:02 | 5 |
| Re: -.1
The language situation may be remarkable, but someone's geography
is somewhat amiss...Point Barrow is the most _northern_ point in
the United States. You can go considerably further west than that.
|