Heckewelder's Vocabulary of Nanticoke

Heckewelder's Vocabulary of Nanticoke
Author: John Gottlieb Ernestus Heckewelder
Publisher: Evolution Publishing & Manufacturing
Total Pages: 56
Release: 2004
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN:

"Native American Language, Algonquian language, linguistics, language dictionary. This volume features 146 words of this Maryland language collected in 1785 by John Heckewelder, a Moravian missionary. Heckewelder compiled the vocabulary from a Nanticoke chief residing in Canada, probably at Six Nations Reserve. The volume was collated from various manuscripts found in the collections of the American Philosophical Society and contains valuable background information gleaned from Heckewelder's personal correspondence."

A Vocabulary of the Nanticoke Dialect

A Vocabulary of the Nanticoke Dialect
Author: William Vans Murray
Publisher: Arx Publishing, LLC
Total Pages: 46
Release: 2005
Genre: History
ISBN: 1889758612

This volume contains a list of some 300 words collected by Murray in 1796 along the Choptank River on Maryland's Eastern Shore. It further contains introductory remarks and annotation by linguist Daniel G. Brinton, who provides words for comparison in a number of other Algonquin languages including Lenape and Chipeway. This edition features an indexed listing of Brinton's Algonquin comparisons in the appendix.

A Vocabulary of the Unami Jargon

A Vocabulary of the Unami Jargon
Author: Thomas Campanius Holm
Publisher: Arx Publishing, LLC
Total Pages: 75
Release: 2005-06
Genre: Unami jargon
ISBN: 1889758639

From Campanius' Vocabularium Barbaro-Virgineorum, this volume features a vocabulary of the Unami traders' jargon of Lenape-Delaware used along the lower Delaware River, with over 500 entries plus dialogues and speeches recorded in the 1640s. It follows theedition translated by Peter S. Duponceau in 1834. Also included in this volume is William Penn's word-list of the Pennsylvania Indians, which lists 17 words in the jargon.

Minor Vocabularies of Nanticoke-Conoy

Minor Vocabularies of Nanticoke-Conoy
Author: Thomas Jefferson
Publisher: Evolution Publishing & Manufacturing
Total Pages: 84
Release: 2009
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN:

"Excerpted from: Frank G. Speck. 1927. The Nanticoke and Conoy Indians, with a review of Linguistic Material from Manuscript and Living Sources. Wilmington:The Historical Society of Delaware"--T.p. vers

The Tutelo Language

The Tutelo Language
Author: Horatio Hale
Publisher: Arx Publishing, LLC
Total Pages: 118
Release: 2023-03-20
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN:

The most significant treatment of the language(s) spoken by the Siouan tribes of Virginia is the 1883 article "The Tutelo Tribe and Language" by Horatio Hale. Hale includes a substantial 279 word vocabulary, as well as numerous grammatical tables with explanations, mostly gathered from an elderly Tutelo called Nikonha. This edition includes all the Tutelo grammatical material printed by Hale, and organizes the vocabulary into bidirectional English-Tutelo and a new Tutelo-English section.

A Vocabulary of Mohegan-Pequot

A Vocabulary of Mohegan-Pequot
Author: John Dyneley Prince
Publisher: Arx Publishing, LLC
Total Pages: 89
Release: 2005-06
Genre: Mohegan language
ISBN: 1889758647

Mohegan-Pequot was an Eastern Algonquian language originally spoken in southeastern Connecticut along the Thames River. It became extinct in the early 20th century. This vocabulary contains 446 words collected in 1903 by J. Dyneley Prince and Frank Speck from Fidelia Fielding, a resident of Mohegan, Connecticut and the last native speaker of the dialect; with 12 additional words from the Brothertown reservation in Wisconsin. It features etymological and comparative linguistic commentary for each term by Prince and Speck.

A Dictionary of Powhatan

A Dictionary of Powhatan
Author:
Publisher: Arx Publishing, LLC
Total Pages: 115
Release: 2005-06
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 1889758620

This volume represents the largest vocabulary ever collected of Powhatan -- approximately 1,000 entries compiled by William Strachey around 1612. This edition is based on Major's 1849 printing of the British Museum manuscript, with variant forms and extra words cited from the Bodleian manuscript. Two supplementary word-lists of Virginia Algonquian are also included: nine words from an anonymous relation of 1607 attributed to Gabriel Archer, and 29 words from Robert Beverley's 1705 History and Present State of Virginia. This edition also features an introduction by Powhatan scholar Frederic Gleach.