PLAINS CREE LANGUAGE, PEOPLE, & CULTURE
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- Опубліковано 27 вер 2024
- Welcome to my channel! This is Andy from I love languages. Let's learn different languages/dialects together.
This video is created for educational, language awareness, and language preservation purposes. It aims to provide valuable insights and knowledge to viewers, enhancing their understanding and appreciation of different languages and their unique characteristics. By raising awareness about linguistic diversity, the video seeks to foster a greater respect and recognition for various languages, particularly those that are endangered or underrepresented. Additionally, it contributes to the preservation of languages by documenting and sharing linguistic knowledge, thus ensuring that these languages and their cultural heritage are not lost to future generations.
Special Thanks to Tim Cardinal :D
Tânisi, kiya mâka? Andy nitisiyihkāson.
Hello! My name is Andy. How are you?
Let's talk about the Plains Cree language.
Cree is part of the Algonquian language family, the largest First Nations linguistic group in Canada, with 45,000 to 60,000 speakers. There are five main dialects: Western/Plains Cree, Northern/Woodlands Cree, Central/Swampy Cree, Moose Cree, and Eastern Cree. While these dialects share similarities, mutual intelligibility is not guaranteed. A 12-sign syllabary for the Cree language was created in 1841 by Wesleyan missionary James Evans. With many children being raised bilingual in Cree and English or French, Cree has a strong chance of survival among native languages, leading to one of the highest literacy rates globally.
The Cree traditionally occupied a large area from James Bay to Lake Winnipeg and south to Lake Nipigon. Pushed westward by the fur trade, they eventually reached Saskatchewan. They lived in dome-shaped wigwams made of green saplings in woodland areas and conical tipis covered with animal skins on the plains. In winter, they often used sod houses. Their environment was harsh, with cold winters and hot, mosquito-infested summers, leading to a diet primarily based on hunting due to limited plant food. The Cree feared the Windigo spirit, which was associated with cannibalism during starvation. The Plains Cree focused on bison hunting and gathering wild plants. During the hunting season, Cree traveled in small bands, and in summer, they formed larger communities for fishing. Their hunting practices were influenced by their religion, which required showing respect to the animals they hunted.
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I hope you have a great day! Stay happy!
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If you are interested to see your native language/dialect be featured here.
Submit your recordings to otipeps24@gmail.com.
Looking forward to hearing from you!
Some of my ancestors spoke this.....well the Swampy dialect to be exact 👀
God bless your people❤❤❤
awesome language, hope it doesn't die
Спасибо за ваши небольшие видео, они всегда интересны
One of the most unique alphabets in the world! May the Cree keep it the way it is! 🫡
The Eskimos use it as well 👀
As do the Blackfoot
@@javindhillon6294 Dope!
abugida technically
It is not unique, the Inuit also in Greenland
this language is very polite, both in shape and phonetics, also the spelling is beautifuly arranged.
Cree is very similar to my own Wolastoqey language spoken in maritime Canada, the numbers especially. One day, I hope to see Wolastoqey on this channel and maybe even one of those comparison videos with Wolastoqey and Cree. Both languages are algic.
Do you speak Wolastoqey? :) would you like to volunteer. :)
@ilovelanguages0124 I do to a certain degree, I've been learning Wolastoqey since 2019, and I can communicate at a basic level and read and write at an L1 intermediate level I would say. I'm definitely not a fluent speaker, but I know pretty much all of the essential vocabulary for day to day life. I'd definitely love to volunteer! I wanna get my language out there to as many people as possible!
@@wyattmoulton5119 Thank you so much! I am really honored to feature your language. :)
Please help me with it!
Here are the things we need from you:
Text and Audio for the following: (1 audio per category mp3 format)
1. The native name of the language/ dialect,
2. Numbers 1 to 10,
3. Greetings & Phrases,
4. Vocabulary,
5. Any story / Sample text,
6. Images for:
Flag & Emblem,
Traditional Costumes,
Art/ Patterns.
7. Info about the language, people, & culture (w/ images)
8. Suggestion for Background music :D
Stay happy,
Andy
Email: otipeps24@gmail.com
@ilovelanguages0124 OK, gotchu! Thank you for letting me volunteer for my language on your channel, Andy!
I will never understand why some people downvote videos like this. This is extremely informative and interesting stuff, presented in a good-spirited and likable way. The whole channel is a gem.
THE GREAT SPIRIT BLESS THE CREE
#ᔪᕤᐕᕓᔳᐊᕄ
I love languages
❤️
I hope someone volunteers for Mi’kmaq, i’m so interested in the native american languages
Already have. It will be posted within a few days. ✨✨✨
Great!
A missionary seems to have created the script. Interesting
Please please please do Huron Wendat language
1:25 I think you have a mistake. The picture in the bottom left corner is more likely from 1883, not 1983.
Interesting!
First
pokawiyak cî kinis’tohtawinâwâw?
Could you make Iraqi Arabic and Persian?
awawaw
I want to put my language here. How?
Blessed day! Please help me with it! :)
Mp3 format (1 continuous recording per category)
1. Name of the language/dialect
2. Numbers 1-10
3. Greetings and Phrases
4. Vocabulary
5. Any Native Story
6. Music: Instrumental
7.Images:
Flag & Emblem
Traditional Dress
Art & Patterns
Culture (e.g. food, place, art, dances et.c)
8. Information:
About the language, people & culture
Looking forward to hearing from you!
Stay happy,
Andy
Email: otipeps24@gmail.com
@@ilovelanguages0124 1-8 are with MP3?
@@CumaBerry only 1-6 :)
@@CumaBerryWhat's your language?
ᒫᒪᐢᑳᐨ! Plains Cree really is by far the most interesting language I’ve ever had the privilege of studying. It’s important for languages like these to be represented/archived online. ᑭᒥᓯ ᓇᓈᐢᑯᒥᑎᐣ、 ᐊᐣᑏ - thank you very much Andy ♡
Is it related to other languages?
Yes, it’s an Algonquian language. Algonquian languages are very widespread in the US and Canada. It’s related to Shawnee, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Ojibwe, Potawatomi, Blackfoot (Siksika), and a bunch of other North American languages
akakakak
Racism enough 💀
Hope you will have a volunteer for Cheyenne, Fox, and Shawnee.
I have a Cheyenne volunteer. I hope someone will volunteer for Fox and Shawnee. :)
Great deep dive thanks for sharing.💚💙
Jin Chinese, please
I never thought i would hear the lords prayer in an native american language 😭
It's not Native American. It's First Nations.
@@sweiland75 my apologies
I hope you will do Anishinaabemowin next 🩷