22 research outputs found
Polyadicity of Three Verbs Associated with Bloodletting Rituals in Western Glyphic Maya
Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics
Society (1986), pp. 186-19
Formulaic Patterns in the Maya Script
Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics
Society (1985), pp. 216-22
Noun and Verb Morphology in Micmac Hieroglyphic Texts
Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics
Society: Special Session on General Topics in American Indian
Linguistics (1990), pp. 128-13
Signs of Cherokee Culture: Sequoyah’s Syllabary in Eastern Cherokee Life. By Margaret Bender.
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Signs of Cherokee Culture: Sequoyah’s Syllabary in Eastern Cherokee Life. By Margaret Bender.
NAHUA LOAN WORDS FROM THE EARLY CLASSIC PERIOD: Words for cacao preparation on a RÃo Azul ceramic vessel
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J. P. Harrington Database Project: An Archival Resource for Anthropologists, Archaeologists, and Native Communities
John Peabody Harrington (1884-1961) collected over one million pages of linguistic and ethnographic notes from Native Americans during the first half of the twentieth century (for biographies, see Golla 1994b; Hinton 1994; Laird 1975; Stirling and Glemser 1963; Walsh 1976). Within a decade of his death most of his notes could be found at the National Anthropological Archives in Washington, DC. During the 1980s the materials, which had been organized by language, were microfilmed, along with Harrington's correspondence, creating an archival record of his work. The Papers of John P. Harrington in the Smithsonian Institution (Harrington 1981-1994). The microfilm collection of his notes is divided into nine volumes. Guides to this collection were created under the direction of Elaine L. Mills (Mills 1981-1985; Mills and Brickfield 1986-1989; Mills and MUls 1991). They contain lists of the languages within each "volume" and the associated reel numbers, the names of Native Americans interviewed by Harrington, general information about the times and places of the interviews, and common abbreviations he used
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J. P. Harrington Project: Academic and Community Participation
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