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  2. Maude Kegg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maude_Kegg

    Maude Mitchell was born in a dark wigwam in August of 1904 in Crow Wing County, Minnesota, near Portage Lake, a few miles northwest of Mille Lacs Lake. [2] Her parents were Charles Mitchell, a member of the non-Removable Mille Lacs Indians of the Adik-doodem, and his wife, Nancy Pine.

  3. Birchbark biting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birchbark_biting

    Birchbark biting (Ojibwe: Mazinibaganjigan, plural: mazinibaganjiganan) is an Indigenous artform made by Anishinaabeg, including Ojibwe people, [1] Potawatomi, and Odawa, as well as Cree [2] and other Algonquian peoples of the Subarctic and Great Lakes regions of Canada and the United States.

  4. Patrick DesJarlait - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_DesJarlait

    Patrick DesJarlait, Sr. (1921–1972) was an Ojibwe artist and a member of the Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians. Known for his watercolor paintings, DesJarlait created roughly 300 artworks during his lifetime.

  5. Ojibwe grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ojibwe_grammar

    The gender distinction in Ojibwe is not a masculine/feminine contrast, but is rather between animate and inanimate.Animate nouns are generally living things, and inanimate ones generally nonliving things, although that is not a simple rule because of the cultural understanding as to whether a noun possesses a "spirit" or not (generally, if it can move, it possesses a "spirit").

  6. Chippewa language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chippewa_language

    There are case markings that come at the beginning of words to show what verb type or noun type the word is. Other classes of words include adverbs, numbers, particles, pre-nouns, and pre-verbs. [12] Pre-verbs and pre-nouns are not whole words; however, they are modifying forms that freely combine with nouns, verbs, or adverbs to add meaning.

  7. Western Ojibwa language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Ojibwa_language

    Ojibwa verbs also mark whether the action is direct or inverse. In the first two examples the action takes place directly, where the proximate is acting upon the obviative. This direction can be inverted meaning that the verb marks when the obviative is acting on the proximate by using the inverse morpheme –ikô- :

  8. Category:Ojibwe artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Ojibwe_artists

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  9. Ojibwe language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ojibwe_language

    The general grammatical characteristics of Ojibwe are shared across its dialects. The Ojibwe language is polysynthetic, exhibiting characteristics of synthesis and a high morpheme-to-word ratio. Ojibwe is a head-marking language in which inflectional morphology on nouns and particularly verbs carries significant amounts of grammatical information.