Macro-Siouan languages - Factbites
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Topic: Macro-Siouan languages


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


In the News (Sun 20 Dec 09)

  
 Languages & Writing Systems
The South American Indian languages are much more numerous: the Andean-Equatorial group, for example, includes 14 families and almost 200 languages spoken from French Guiana to Colombia and south to Paraguay, as well as along the Amazon.
Language is an ever evolving process on planet Earth varying from culture to culture and place to place depending on the needs of the civilization that existed at that timeline.
Language is a system of conventional spoken or written symbols by means of which human beings, as members of a social group and participants in its culture, communicate.
www.crystalinks.com /languages.html

  
 Native American languages. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
Languages of the Hokan-Siouan stock are also found in Mexico and parts of Central America.
Native American languages cannot be differentiated as a linguistic unit from other languages of the world but are grouped into a number of separate linguistic stocks having significantly different phonetics, vocabularies, and grammars.
175 Native American languages were spoken in the United States, but only 20 of these were widely known, and 55 were spoken by only a few elderly tribal members; 100 other languages were somewhere between these extremes.
www.bartleby.com /65/na/NatvAmlang.html

  
 Language families and languages - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Languages that cannot be reliably classified into any family are known as
The ancestor is very seldom known to us directly, since most languages have a very short recorded history.
Language families can be subdivided into smaller units, conventionally referred to as "branches" (because the history of a language family is often represented as a "tree" diagram).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Language_family

  
 Iroquoian languages - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Some linguists group the Iroquoian languages with the Siouan languages as the Macro-Siouan family, but this larger family is not recognized by a consensus of linguists.
The Iroquoian languages are a Native American language family.
Excavated grains, pottery and other evidence suggests that a typical Indian meal consisted of soup made from different plants and animals, with corn as a staple in their diets.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Iroquoian

  
 Search Results for macro - Encyclopædia Britannica
Macro - Pano-Tacanan, a group more distantly related than a stock, includes about 30 languages, many of them still spoken.
Macro -Chibchan languages, which form the linguistic bridge between South and Central America, are spoken from Nicaragua to Ecuador.
major grouping (phylum or superstock) of North American Indian languages; it is made up of 26 languages, grouped into 5 families: Siouan, with 12 languages; Catawba, with 1 language (extinct);...
www.britannica.com /search?query=macro&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT

  
 macro - Definition of macro by Webster's Online Dictionary
Macro languages are not widely used for general-purpose programming, but are common in text processing applications.
Macro (meaning a kind of close-up photography) is found at Macro photography.
macro - A name ( possibly followed by a formal argument list) that is equated to a text or symbolic expression to which it is to be expanded ( possibly with the substitution of actual arguments) by a macro expander.
www.webster-dictionary.org /definition/macros

  
 Links about Language
Languages on the Web (resource for on-line language learning)
Surveys of world languages Ethnologue, Languages of the World
For example, a language may have a concept of "dog", and whether it distinguishes adult dogs, sick dogs, male and female dogs, different breeds and colors, is the territory of semantics.
www.johnwdurham.com /newfile68.html

  
 ONEOFMANYFEATHERSPM
In general, languages are grouped into families, which in turn are grouped into larger language phyla.
Native American languages, like other languages, can be classified in large groups.
Many Indian languages are lost because all the people who spoke them died before their languages could be recorded.
www.msnusers.com /ONEOFMANYFEATHERSPM/theamericanindian8.msnw

  
 Siouan
Siouan Proper includes the languages of the Mandan, Crow, and Hocák (or Winnebago); the Dakota, Nakota, and Lakota dialects spoken by the Sioux and related dialects of the Assiniboine and Stoney peoples of Canada; and the nearly extinct Dhegiha languages of the Kaw, Osage, Ponca, Omaha, and Quapaw.
Siouan is the dominant language group of the Great Plains region of the USA and Canada.
It has two branches: Siouan Proper and Catawba.
www.tiscali.co.uk /reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0101926.html

  
 Numbers in Over 5000 Languages
Languages with more than a million native speakers are named in boldface.
There is nothing inherent in the language variety to tell us what it is. Linguists sometimes use "language" to refer to a mutually intelligible group of dialects (but note that intelligibility can be partial).
Language Information : notes on linguistic families, and a taste of ethnomathematics.
www.zompist.com /numbers.shtml

  
 Macro-Siouan languages
The Macro-Siouan languages are a proposed language family that includes the Siouan, Iroquoian, and Caddoan languages.
Many linguists remain unconvinced that these three language groups share a genetic relationship, and the existence of a Macro-Siouan language family remains a subject of some debate.
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/M/Macro-Siouan-languages.htm

  
 The Siouan Languages Bibliography
Siouan Languages Conference, Rapid City, SD, May, 1983.
The purpose of this web site is to bring together in one place a searchable bibliography of all the linguistic and language related work done on the Siouan-Catawban languages.
Siouan and Caddoan Languages Conference, Linguistic Institute,, Albuquerque, NM, July 1995.
puffin.creighton.edu /lakota/siouan_language.html

  
 The Museum of Human Language
Languages can also be classified by sounds or articulatory gestures.
When the colonies became independent, sometimes the native languages had died out, sometimes there were so many native languages that it made sense to continue with the colonial language.
Planned languages can be created from scratch (see constructed languages) or they can be modifications of original languages, as when a standard language is created.
www.geocities.com /agihard/mohl/mohl_languages.html

  
 Native American Language Net: Preserving and promoting indigenous American Indian languages
Actually, Native American languages do not belong to a single Amerindian family, but 25-30 small ones; they are usually discussed together because of the small numbers of natives speaking most of these languages and how little is known about many of them.
Alphabetical master list of Native American languages, with links to specific information about each language and its native speakers.
But this site has inner beauty, for it is, or will be, a compendium of online materials about more than 800 indigenous languages of the Western Hemisphere and the people that speak them.
www.native-languages.org

  
 LINGUIST List 9.1653: Animacy and Definiteness
Other Siouan languages mark definiteness and animacy in various less florid ways.
However, the problem is that many Mayan languages have the same word order alternation but do it on the basis of animacy instead of definiteness.
I'd hoped to reduce these languages in some way to the ones that do it by definiteness by claiming definiteness and animacy were part and parcel of the same phenomenon.
www.ling.ed.ac.uk /linguist/issues/9/9-1653.html

  
 Guides by Language Family
See also our page of sites of interest for more than one language.
We encourage users to adhere by any usage agreements packaged with the font.
babel.uoregon.edu /yamada/famguides.html

  
 Search Results for Siouan - Encyclopædia Britannica
North American Indian family of languages that, with the Iroquoian and Caddoan language families, constitutes the Macro- Siouan language phylum.
major grouping (phylum or superstock) of North American Indian languages; it is made up of 26 languages, grouped into 5 families: Siouan, with 12 languages; Catawba, with 1 language (extinct);...
The first comprehensive classification into families of the North American Indian languages was made in 1891 by the American John Wesley Powell, who based his study on impressionistic resemblances in...
www.britannica.com /search?query=Siouan&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT

  
 LINGUIST List 8.1722: Re: 8.1705, Sum: First Person and Gender
Among these, we have Sapir's beautiful and famous description of Yana, and some Arawan languages of the Amazon, Garifuna (Arawak language of Central America), some Siouan languages, and Chukchi and Biloxi (where are these languages spoken, I'm afraid I don't know).
While these particles are the main intrusion of "sex gender" into Siouan grammar, there somewhat similar concords for "positional gender." For example, the progressive forms in Omaha-Ponca and other Dhegiha languages are indicated by a verb final auxiliary that concords with the "positional gender" of the subject.
Languages that have "men's speech" vs "women's speech".
www.linguistlist.org /issues/8/8-1722.html

  
 Encyclopedia: Siouan languages
Some linguists group the Siouan languages together with the Caddoan and Iroquoian languages in a Macro-Siouan language family.
The Siouan languages are a Native American language family of North America.
  * * Winnebago language (Hoc k language)   * Missouri Valley Siouan languages
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Siouan-languages

  
 LINGUIST List 7.519: Italian, Quantifiers, Interruptions, Macro-Siouan
Note that i am particularly interested not in treatments of individual languages -- i have several of those, and have no trouble finding others -- but in general overviews of the entire family, focussing on inter-language relationships.
I would also be interested in knowing if anyone else is working on interruptions, and if so, from which perspective.
I'm familiar with Chaffe's 1976 book on the subject, but would like to know of anything more recent.
www.linguistlist.org /issues/7/7-519.html

  
 almanac_00-4-8.doc
Languages of the Pacific Northwest are famous for having large numbers of consonants; Nootka has thirty-seven (see Figure 4).
However, the Inuit (eastern) branch of Eskimo is also the principal language of Greenland (under Danish administration); and several languages of the southwestern United States, such as Pima-Papago (O’odham), are also spoken in northern Mexico.
This phenomenon is partly responsible for the stereotypes of American Indian languages as guttural.
www.ncidc.org /bright/almanac_00-4-8.doc

  
 The U of MT -- Mansfield Library LangFing Index M
You have reached the "M" portion of the Comprehensive Language Index to the "Language Finger" homepage; Language Finger is an index by language to the holdings of the Mansfield Library of The University of Montana.
www.lib.umt.edu /guide/lang/xmx.htm

  
 Native American languages
languages article @ Euro Online Encyclopedia'>Native American languages
article at Free Euro Online Encyclopedia
languages article @ Euro Online Encyclopedia'>Native American languages
It uses material from the wikipedia article Native American languages.
www.eurofreehost.com /na/Native_American_languages.html

  
 LINGUIST List 8.876: Macro-Siouan,Clausal modifier,Lg change
Some abrupt structural changes in these languages have led me to susp ect that most of the Grammatical notions/categories of contemporary Roman ce languages have been formed to match the (Greek-)Latin model, or that at least the formations have not always been self-inductive.
Currently, I am checking the validity of the hypothesis by examining the adequacy of grammatical notions/categories in Latin whi ch were directly introduced to the Romance languages of the early Middle Ages.
My working hypothesis is that the grammar of a specific language can impose itself as a mandatory framework upon grammars of following generation(s).
www.linguistlist.org /issues/8/8-876.html

  
 The Shape of Society
The Shape of Society of the Peoples of the Macro-Siouan Language Group.
What were the lifeways and languages of these people?.
How did individuals live their lives, and how did their existence fit into tribal mores?
www.ancientsites.com /aw/Thread/291889

  
 Information about PROPOSED LANGUAGES
This category includes proposed languages and language families.
ArticleHead.com » Top » Communication » Languages » Extinct languages » Proposed languages
Shop for music : dvds : videos : books : video games : toys
www.articleshead.com /browse_categories/Proposed-languages

  
 Macro-Ge - MavicaNET
Pay from $5, and your site will be listed in Top-5 of desirable category.
PURI: an extinct language of Brazil - English
OTI: an extinct language of Brazil - English
www.mavicanet.com /directory/dut/2140.html

  
 Siouan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Some linguists associate Siouan languages with Caddoan and Iroquoian languages in a Macro-Siouan language family.
Siouan is a family of related Native American languages in North America.
Siouan also extends back East and down South.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Siouan

  
 Siouan
Siouan languages The Siouan languages are a Macro-Siouan language family.
Siouan Given by http://www.lakhota.com/ you will find the Months of the year.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /topics/siouan.html

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