Assiniboine and Stoney.

Parks, Douglas R. parksd at indiana.edu
Wed Feb 16 16:15:18 UTC 2005


Maybe you people are too new to the field, but Allan Taylor addressed
this very issue in a paper delivered at the AAA ca. 1980.  It isn't
published, so perhaps John can get a copy of it from Allan and maybe
scan it for web "publication."  Allan cites data, not hunches.

Doug

__________________________________________________

Douglas R. Parks
Professor of Anthropology
Associate Director, American Indian Studies Research Institute
Indiana University
422 North Indiana Avenue
Bloomington, IN  47408

Phone  812.855.4123
Fax  812.855.7529  ||  E-mail  parksd at indiana.edu  ||  AISRI web site
http://www.indiana.edu/~aisri


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu
[mailto:owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu] On Behalf Of Anthony Grant
Sent: Wednesday, February 16, 2005 4:46 AM
To: siouan at lists.colorado.edu
Subject: RE: Assiniboine and Stoney.

What about Stoney items such as the Cree-derived word meaning 'money'?

Anthony

>>> cstelfer at ucalgary.ca 15/02/2005 22:58:34 >>>
> -And a dictionary or two wouldn't go amiss either.  I'm especially
> interested in the impact that Cree has had on Stoney.
>
> Anthony

I responded to this comment earlier by saying that I didn't think Cree
had
had any impact on Stoney, however, I forgot that the Paul Band
reserves
are mixed with both Cree and Stoney people.  Unfortunately to my
knowledge
Stoney is not really spoken there anymore, which is not surprising
considering the linguistic pressures exerted by both English and Cree.

The Northern Stoney data I have is from the Alexis Band, so it has no
Cree
influence.  If there was any Cree influence on the Paul Band dialect
of
Stoney, I think it would be quite hard to detect it at this point in
time.

Corey.




>
>>>> rankin at ku.edu 25/01/2005 16:01:39 >>>
>> I was talking with John Newman at Edmonton in October
>> and he felt that the two major Stoney dialect clusters
>> might be different in this regard.
>
>> I guess I should always distinguish between South Stoney (Morley,
> Eden
> Valley and Big Horn reserves) and North Stoney (Alexis and Paul
bands).
>
> The South Stoneys have apparently lost the glottalized set of stops
> and
> collapsed them with the aspirated series, but the Northern group
have
> not.
>
> And the South group has those neat pharyngeals. . . .
>
> Newman said the two groups migrated to their current locations in
> southern and central Alberta via very different routes, suggesting
> some
> significant time depth between the dialects.  Gee, a coupla good
> reference grammars would be a good thing!  :-)      Bob
>
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