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  2. Category:Inuktitut words and phrases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Inuktitut_words...

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  3. Inuktitut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuktitut

    Inuit were supposed to use English at school, work, and even on the playground. [10] Inuit themselves viewed Inuktitut as the way to express their feelings and be linked to their identity, while English was a tool for making money. [8] In the 1960s, the European attitude towards the Inuktitut language started to change.

  4. Inuktitut syllabics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuktitut_syllabics

    The first efforts to write Inuktitut came from Moravian missionaries in Greenland and Labrador in the mid-19th century using Latin script. The first book printed in Inuktitut using Cree script was an 8-page pamphlet known as Selections from the Gospels in the dialect of the Inuit of Little Whale River (ᒋᓴᓯᑊ ᐅᑲᐤᓯᐣᑭᐟ, "Jesus' words"), [4] printed by John Horden in 1855–56 ...

  5. Eskaleut languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eskaleut_languages

    Eskaleut is polysynthetic, which features a process in which a single word is able to contain multiple post-bases or morphemes. The Eskaleut languages are exclusively suffixing (with the exception of one prefix in Inuktitut that appears in demonstratives). Suffixes are able to combine and ultimately create an unlimited number of words.

  6. Inuinnaqtun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuinnaqtun

    Inuinnaqtun (Inuinnaqtun: ᐃᓄᐃᓐᓇᖅᑐᓐ‎, IPA: [inuinːɑqtun]; natively meaning 'like the real human beings/peoples') is an Inuit language.It is spoken in the central Canadian Arctic.

  7. List of English words from Indigenous languages of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_words_from...

    Words of Nahuatl origin have entered many European languages. Mainly they have done so via Spanish. Most words of Nahuatl origin end in a form of the Nahuatl "absolutive suffix" (-tl, -tli, or -li, or the Spanish adaptation -te), which marked unpossessed nouns. Achiote (definition) from āchiotl [aːˈt͡ʃiot͡ɬ] Atlatl (definition)

  8. Inuit languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuit_languages

    The Inuit languages can form very long words by adding more and more descriptive affixes to words. Those affixes may modify the syntactic and semantic properties of the base word, or may add qualifiers to it in much the same way that English uses adjectives or prepositional phrases to qualify nouns (e.g. "falling snow", "blowing snow", "snow on ...

  9. Inuvialuktun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inuvialuktun

    Inuit from Alaska moved into traditionally Siglit areas in the 1910s and 1920s, enticed in part by renewed demand for furs from the Hudson's Bay Company. These Inuit are called Uummarmiut – which means people of the green trees – in reference to their settlements near the tree line. Originally, there was an intense dislike between the ...