<!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en">
<html>
<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
Frank Abate wrote:
<blockquote TYPE=CITE><font face="Arial"><font size=-1>5. Would that we
could know the majority preference of these peoples, and make that a general
preference.</font></font></blockquote>
<p><br>On the few times I've had occasion to have a personal discussion
of the use of "Native American" with actual American Indians (massive sample
of maybe 2, maybe 3), they used the word "Indian" in conversation but,
being members of the larger society as well as the members of their own
groups, showed some degree of anxiety that one probably should use the
term "Native American" because that's what is currently recommended as
the most "acceptable." When a representative of AIM spoke at the
conference of the Council of Geographic Names Authorities in Cody in 1998,
he used the politically effective (not just a matter of PCness) term as
well as "Indian." Wouldn't "majority preference" also be context-dependent
-- i.e. vary from one context to another? Words are tools for doing
things, not just for referring to things.
<br>DMLance
</body>
</html>