UofA and CRIT

Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine brunner at NIC-NAA.NET
Wed Oct 30 17:38:30 UTC 2002


Dan,

I was puzzled by that too.

A common problem is that few groups have a standard orthography.

In Abenaki we have "w" or "ou" or "8" (that's a "u" on top of an "o", from
the time when French didn't actually have a "w").

In Siksika we have with diacriticals and without. In archaic Siksika we have
syllabics and romanesque orthographies.

Some community programs have adopted to the qwerty repitoire, like the Old
Sun School and modern Siksika, which is diacritically simplified.

Some are still "digging their way out" from the speed-writing gibberish of
the late-19th century and the IPA damage of the 20th century, and haven't
yet reached the point of looking at typography as a cost of doing business.

Here'e some more charsets:

Siksika/Cree/Tsitsistas Charsets

        siksika.charset ::
                {a,h,i,k,m,n,o,p,s,t,w,y:`,acute-vowel}
        cree.charset ::
                {a,c,e,g,h,i,k,m,n,o,p,s,w,y:^}
        tsitsistas.charset ::
                {a,e,h,k,',m,n,o,p,s,s,t,v,x:',^}

The usual caveat, these come from current community teaching programs, not
from external sources.

Kitakitamatsinopowaw && Adio (wicked shorter in Abenaki, neh?)
Eric



More information about the Ilat mailing list