uc berkeley yurok language - EAS
- https://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~yurok
Yurok Language Project Department of Linguistics University of California 1203 Dwinelle Hall #2650 Berkeley, CA 94720-2650 Project director: Andrew Garrett
Search
Dictionary and text search. You can search through our dictionary and text …
Spoken texts
Teaching, learning, and documenting Yurok Domingo, a well-known singer and …
Songs
Yurok Language Project: Yurok Song Recordings at Berkeley
Stories in English
Yurok Language Project: Yurok Stories in English - Linguistics
Geography
Geography and place names. Click on an area of the map, from Robert Spott and …
The Yurok language
The Yurok language Geography. Yurok has been spoken in northwest California for …
Georgiana Trull's Yurok Conv…
Georgiana Trull's Yurok Language Conversation Book
Language learning tools
Yurok Verb Guide, version 1.1 (December 30, 2009), a guide to the forms of 75 …
Publications on Yurok
Publications on the Yurok Language. Strictly anthropological work is in principle not …
Links
Florence Shaughnessy may have contributed more to Yurok language …
- https://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~yurok/web/language.php
- Yurok is distantly related to its neighbor Wiyot, and to languages belonging to the Algonquian language family spoken across central and eastern North America; the Algonquian languages include Blackfoot, Cree, Ojibwe, and many others. Linguists believe that Wiyot, Yurok, and all the Algonquian languages descend from a single common ancestor spoken ...
- https://cla.berkeley.edu/languages/yurok.html
Yurok. The traditional Yurok language area is along the Klamath River, from its mouth at Requa to Weitchpec about 40 miles upstream, and south along the Pacific coast from Requa to Trinidad. In pre-colonial times there may have been about 2,500 speakers (Kroeber 1925). In the 21st century, while the Yurok Tribe is the largest in California, there are fewer than a dozen first-language …
- https://cla.berkeley.edu/languages/yurok.php
The traditional Yurok language area is along the Klamath River, from its mouth at Requa to Weitchpec about 40 miles upstream, and south along the Pacific coast from Requa to Trinidad. In pre-contact times there may have been about 2,500 speakers (Kroeber 1925).
- www.linguistics.berkeley.edu/~yurok/index.php
Yurok Language Project Department of Linguistics University of California 1203 Dwinelle Hall #2650 Berkeley, CA 94720-2650 Project director: Andrew Garrett
- https://lx.berkeley.edu/news/yurok-language-project
Andrew Garrett's Yurok Language Project combines active fieldwork with Yurok elders with philological analysis of earlier fieldnotes and recordings to develop a Yurok documentary corpus. The Yurok materials are organized into a single digital archive, publicly available on the project web site, which incorporates information from as early as 1850 to the present day.
- https://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~yurok/web/search.php
An audio dictionary search will find matching audio clips — recordings of words and short phrases — in the online audio dictionary. A search in texts will find matching sentences in the online text datbase. Some of these sentences will include audio recordings. Enter search terms and click Search for the type of search you prefer, or leave ...
- https://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~yurok/web/songs.php
Domingo of Weitchpec (1906, 1909): nine Brush Dance songs (H 809-813 [musical transcr. K], 1885-87, 1893) 2. Umits of Kepel (1906): Brush Dance song (H 876) 3. Hawley of Meta (1906): two Brush Dance songs (H 884-85) 4. Domingo of Weitchpec and Billy Werk (1907): three Brush Dance songs, including one light song ( H 989 [musical transcr.
- https://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~yurok/web/stories.php
Spoken language and texts reproduced on this site remain the intellectual and cultural property of their creators. Basket designs are from A. L. Kroeber, Basket designs of the Indians of northwestern California (1905).
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yurok_language
Yurok is an Algic language. It is the traditional language of the Yurok people of Del Norte County and Humboldt County on the far north coast of California, most of whom now speak English. The last native speaker died in 2013. As of 2012, Yurok language classes were taught to high school students, and other revitalization efforts were expected to increase the population of speakers. …
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