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Innu (Algonquian)

2017
AbstractThis chapter is devoted to Innu (aka Montagnais), a member of the Algonquian language family, spoken by roughly 13,000 people in eleven communities scattered over Northeastern Québec and Labrador in Canada. The language forms part of the Cree-Innu-Naskapi dialect continuum (Quebec and Labrador) with ties to the other Cree dialects spoken west ...
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Towards a New Age in Innu Education: Innu Resistance and Community Activism

Language, Culture and Curriculum, 1998
In Canada, as elsewhere, past and present practices towards indigenous peoples have been characterised by the exploitation of their land, and the stigmatisation of their languages and cultures by subsequent European colonisers. Control of the decision-making processes which affect indigenous peoples has also invariably been in the hands of Europeans ...
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INNU HEALTH

Nutrition Today, 1985
Peter Sarsfield, Ben Andrew
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Imperatives and evidentiality in Innu

2017
Languages with a rich morphology such as Innu, an aboriginal language of Canada, which clearly mark phenomena that are less obvious in analytic languages, have contributed significantly to our understanding of language in several domains. Innu is of particular interest for the typology of imperatives because the imperative in this language is more than
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