Here is the missing URL:<br /><br />Why you should avoid 'mingqutnguaq'<br
/>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7671137.stm<br /><br />Quoting phil cash
cash <cashcash@email.arizona.edu>:<br />
<br />
> Why you should avoid 'mingqutnguaq'<br />
><br />
> Yup'ik Eskimo Grant Kashatok speaks about his life on ice in Newtok,
Alaska<br />
><br />
> By Stephen Chittenden<br />
> BBC News, Newtok, Alaska<br />
><br />
> The number of Eskimo words for snow has long been a point of debate.<br />
><br />
> In the Yup'ik Eskimo Dictionary published by the Native Language <br />
> Centre at the<br />
> University of Alaska, and found in schools throughout Alaska's Yukon
Delta,<br />
> there are 37 ways of referring to it.<br />
><br />
> When snow falls from the sky, an Eskimo can say "it's snowing" in
<br />
> four different<br />
> ways: aniu, cellallir, ganir or qanunge.<br />
><br />
> Once the snow is on the ground, things can get more complicated. <br />
> Light snow is<br />
> kannevvluk, soft and deep snow is muruaneq and drifting snow is <br />
> called natquik.<br />
><br />
> Crusted snow, corniced snow and fresh snow all have their own word too.<br
/>
><br />
> Access full article below:<br />
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/>
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