Virtues-wolves-coyotes
Michael Mccafferty
mmccaffe at indiana.edu
Mon Jul 15 18:40:20 UTC 2002
In the past couple of decades archaeologists have placed the
Kickapoo-Sauk-Fox-Mascouten in late prehistory along the southern shores
of Lake Erie, and then a later move into the eastern and southern
Michigan soon before the curtain call. This would explain why that
language did not have an inherent term for 'coyote'.
On Mon, 15 Jul 2002, David Costa wrote:
> True, when I said that business about acquiring words for 'coyote' when
> being forced into Kansas or Oklahoma, it overlooked the fact that the
> Illinois already had the 'common wolf/ordinary wolf' word by the late 17th
> century. And there's also the possibility that the Woodlands groups could
> have known about coyotes from trips out onto the Plains to hunt bison. But
> maybe this wasn't all that common, since I'm told Fox and Kickapoo don't
> have any particular word for 'coyote'. I think I was told that the Kickapoo
> use the same word as for 'wolf', which would make sense, since their
> familiarity with the coyote would have come at roughly the same time as the
> extinction of the wolf over most of the Lower 48. Just a matter of shifting
> a word from one animal to the similar one that takes its place.
>
> David
>
> > On Sun, 14 Jul 2002, David Costa wrote:
> >>
> >> I can at least add my take on how Algonquian handles this issue. Proto-
> >> Algonquian was pretty clearly NOT spoken in the geographic range of coyotes,
> >> since there's no reconstructible Proto-Algonquian word for the animal. (Tho
> >> there are words for 'wolf' and, especially, 'dog'.) Therefore, as some of
> >> the daughter languages have later moved into the range of coyotes (usually
> >> when the speakers were forced to move to Kansas or Oklahoma),
> >
> > Illinois speakers would have likely been in contact with the
> > prairie-dwelling coyote by ca. 1000 A.D. perhaps slightly before, a time
> > frame generally applicable to any Algonquian language that pushed south
> > and west into the prairies or had prairie connections such as the
> > Potawatomi and Mascouten.
> >
> > Michael McCafferty
> >
> >
>
>
>
Michael McCafferty
307 Memorial Hall
Indiana University
Bloomington, Indiana
47405
mmccaffe at indiana.edu
"Talking is often a torment for me, and I
need many days of silence to recover from the futility of words.
C.G. Jung
"...as a dog howls at the moon, I talk."
Rumi
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