<div>LaXawya, Dave!</div> <div> </div> <div>Hayash mersi pus ukuk hayash Lush Kamlups Wawa pipa mayka mash khapa ntsayka!</div> <div>Thank you very much for these wonderful texts from Kamloops Wawa that you are sending to us!</div> <div>This text is quite clear for me. Just one remark: the first sentence, "Naika shako tanas kamtaks Shinuk pipa", in the first instance I would have translated it "I was born knowing to read in Chinook" (because chaku tEnas means also "to be born"), which is obviously non-sense. In order to avoid confusion, maybe I would have formulated that sentence "Naika tanas shako kamtaks Shinuk pipa", but this again could be missinterpreted as "my child learned the Chinook script". Maybe "Naika shako kamtaks tanas Shinuk pipa" would be better? Most probably, my understanding of Chinook Wawa is too poor.</div> <div> </div> <div>aLqi wEXt,</div> <div>Francisc<BR><BR><B><I>David Robertson <ddr11@COLUMBIA.EDU></I></B>
wrote:</div> <BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">From an 1892 letter from the Williams Lake area:<BR><BR>"Naika shako tanas kamtaks Shinuk pipa, kakwa naika tiki pus kwansim maika <BR>mash kapa naika maika aias tlus pipa, iaka nim Kamlups Wawa, pi naika mamuk <BR>mitlait iht tala kopa ukuk pipa."<BR><BR>"I've learned to read shorthand a bit, so I want you to keep sending me <BR>your wonderful newspaper called Kamloops Wawa, and I'm enclosing a dollar <BR>for the paper."<BR><BR>Any questions? I'm in a hurry so I'm not breaking this down word by word <BR>just now.<BR><BR>--Dave R<BR><BR>To respond to the CHINOOK list, click 'REPLY ALL'. To respond privately to the sender of a message, click 'REPLY'. Hayu masi!<BR></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><p>
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To respond to the CHINOOK list, click 'REPLY ALL'. To respond privately to the sender of a message, click 'REPLY'. Hayu masi!