Woods Cree

Woods Cree
Nīhithawīwin ᓀᐦᐃᖬᐍᐏᐣ
Native toCanada
RegionNorthern Manitoba, Northern Saskatchewan
Ethnicity53,000 Woodland Cree (1982)[1]
Native speakers
1,800 (2016)[2]
Latin, Canadian Aboriginal syllabics (Cree)
Official status
Official language in
Northwest Territories[4]
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3cwd
Glottologwood1236
Linguasphere62-ADA-ab
Woods Cree is classified as Vulnerable by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Woods Cree is an indigenous language spoken in Northern Manitoba, Northern Saskatchewan and Northern Alberta, Canada. It is part of the Cree-Montagnais-Naskapi dialect continuum.[1][5] The dialect continuum has around 116,000 speakers;[2] the exact population of Woods Cree speakers is unknown, estimated between 2,600 and 35,000.

Classification

The Woods Cree language belongs to the Algic family, within the Algonquian subfamily, and the central CreeMontagnaisNaskapi language group.[6][7][8]

Western Cree is a term used to refer to the non-palatized Cree dialects, consisting of Northern Plains Cree, Southern Plains Cree, Woods Cree, Rock Cree, Western Swampy Cree, Eastern Swampy Cree, Moose Cree, and Atikamekw. Western Woods Cree is the term used to refer to the Cree languages west of the Hudson Bay.[9] This includes the languages Rock Cree, western Swampy Cree, and Strongwoods or Bois Fort Cree. James G.E. Smith classified the linguistic nature of the languages of Woods Cree, northern Plains Cree, western Swampy Cree, and the extinct dialect of Misinipi or Rock Cree to all fall under the Western Woods Cree languages.[9]

Another name for Woods Cree is Rocky Cree,[10] translated by Rossignol (1939) from the Cree word asiniˑskaˑwiðiniwak.[11] Rock Cree or Misinipi Cree was a "r" dialect of Cree but now have merged with Woods Cree, together as the "th" dialect of Cree spoken by the group of people geographically located at the eastern foot of the Rocky Mountains.

In Alberta, Woods Cree is also known as Bush Cree.[12]

Precise classification of the Woods Cree language has not been sufficiently documented. Many different names and terms have been used in the description of the "th" dialect of Cree spoken in the forested area north of the Canadian prairies. A more general, all-encompassing term for this dialect is "Woodland Cree", which also refers to the cultural group living in the forested area north of the prairies.[13] This term is used, for example, in separating the cultural groups of Cree people who live in the wooded area from the Plains Cree, who traditionally inhabited the prairies to the south.

The language portal of Canada has divided all Cree languages west of Ontario up until the Rocky Mountains into four main subgroups: Plains Cree, Swampy Cree, Moose Cree and Woods Cree. However, in referring to the Woods Cree language they use the terms Woodland and Rock interchangeably.[14] Whether these terms are interchangeable when referring to the Cree "th" dialect however has not been explicitly determined.

History and Geographic Distribution

Different sources in Canadian history texts document the area in which Woods Cree was and still is spoken today. In the early 1900s, J.B. Tyrrell, a Canadian geologist and cartographer and the editor of explorer David Thompson's work[11] found that the people living in the area of Île-à-la-Crosse and upper Churchill River referred to themselves as Nahathaway and spoke the particular -th dialect of Woods Cree. The Hudson's Bay Company had made record of the area west of James Bay being inhabited by people speaking the -th dialect of Cree.[11] This region of Woods Cree speakers has essentially remained the same until present.

Traditionally Woods Cree was often divided into western and eastern Woods Cree, reaching as far east as Quebec.[15] However, the actual Woods Cree language is now determined to be spoken in the mid-northern part of Manitoba and Saskatchewan. Western Woods Cree is the category of Cree languages spoken west of the Hudson Bay and in the boreal forested area across the northern provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta.[9]

Demographics

In 1982 SIL (Summer Institute for Languages) found that the population of Woods Cree speakers was 35,000 people. More recently the University of Regina has documented that of the approximately 75,000 speakers of Cree across in Canada, 20,000 of them live in Saskatchewan, which is the main area where Woods Cree is spoken.[16] Not only is this finding much less than the 1982 statistic, but this estimation accounts for all types of spoken Cree, not just Woods Cree spoken in Saskatchewan - but note that the Woods Cree spoken outside of Saskatchewan is not accounted for in this statistic. According to the 2016 Canadian Census there were 1,840 individuals who identified Woods Cree as their mother tongue, and 2,665 individuals who said they had some knowledge of Woods Cree. There were also 64,050 people who identified a non-specified dialect of Cree as their mother tongue, and 86,115 who said they had some knowledge of a non-specified dialect of Cree.[2] Some of those individuals could be Woods Cree speakers.

Official Status

Woods Cree is not an official language of any country. Speakers of Woods Cree live in and around the northern, forested area of Manitoba and Saskatchewan.[9][17]

Phonology

Like other western Cree languages and dialects, Woods Cree only contains seventeen different phonemes.[17] This is a fairly small phonemic inventory for a language; for example, Canadian English distinguishes thirty-eight phonemes. The following phonemes can be found in western Cree languages and dialects: /a, â, c, ê, h, i, î, k, m, n, o, ô, p, s, t, w, y/. Woods Cree differs only in merging /ê/ with /î/ (and thus decreasing the vowel inventory by one down to six distinct vowels) but adding "th" (/ð/) as the reflex of Proto-Algonquian *r (and thus maintaining a distinct phoneme that the other Western dialects have lost).[17][clarification needed]

Consonants

Cree Consonants[18]
Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive p ⟨p⟩ t ⟨t⟩ t͡s ⟨c⟩ k ⟨k⟩
Nasal m ⟨m⟩ n ⟨n⟩
Fricative s ⟨s⟩
Approximant w ⟨w⟩ ð ⟨th⟩ (l ⟨l⟩, r ⟨r⟩) j ⟨y⟩ h ⟨h⟩

Vowels

An important aspect of the Cree vowel system is that the Proto Algonquian short /e/ phoneme merged with short /i/ phoneme[18] as shown above. In Woods Cree the long /eː/ also has merged with the long /iː/ phoneme.[19] Phonetically, these two sounds may also alternate.[20] This results in the vowel system of Woods Cree consisting of only three long vowels /iː uː aː/ and three short vowels /i u a/ in the entire language.

Nonpalatalized -th

The distinguishing feature of Woods Cree is the use of the nonpalatalized -th sound in places where other dialects of Cree would use a different sound: for example, Plains Cree is known for using the -y phoneme. This can be demonstrated by the Cree word for 'I'. In Woods Cree the word for 'I' is nitha (IPA: [niða]) whereas in Plains Cree it would be pronounced niya (IPA: [nija], spelled ᓂᔭ[21] in Cree orthography). A significant distinction between Woods Cree and Plains Cree has been questioned in the analysis and history of the language. Various researchers and explorers throughout history however have concluded that there is a "loss of intelligibility between Woods Cree and Plains Cree",[11] distinguishing them as separate languages.

Voiced Dental Fricative patterns (ð)

Cree /ð/ shares features both with obstruents and sonorants.[18] Many languages around the globe have been recorded using the /ð/ phoneme and in most of these cases this phoneme is classified as an obstruent. However, the /ð/ phoneme in spoken Woods Cree has resemblance to a sonorant phoneme. Most of the evidence demonstrated in the article even concludes that it would be more logical to classify this phoneme as a sonorant due to the following five factors: the sonorant realizations of the /ð/ phoneme, the placement of the /ð/ phoneme in the phonological inventory, the voicing patterns of this phoneme in non-word final positions, the usage of /l/ phoneme as a replacement for /ð/ phoneme in caregiver speech, and lastly the /l/ and /ð/ phoneme replacement of /r/ in English loan words.[18] In Proto-Algonquian, the /ð/ phoneme of Woods Cree has been reconstructed as *l and, thus, also demonstrates its relation to being categorized as a sonorant. This analysis is challenged however by particular factors which show the likeness of /ð/ as an obstruent. For example, among younger speakers the /ð/ phoneme is sometimes replaced by a /t/ and voicing in word-final positions also shows that it also falls under obstruent classification.[18] One reason for this particularly unique form of the /ð/ phoneme as explained in the article is a possible phonological shift that is occurring in Woods Cree speech due to the influence of the English phonology on the language, however, the data is inconclusive due to the endangered status of the language.[18]

Morphology

The Woods Cree morphological form follows a similar system to that of other Western Cree dialects (for example, Swampy Cree or Plains Cree). A more comprehensive examination of the Western Cree morphological system relating to Woods Cree can be found on the Swampy Cree Wikipedia page.

Cree languages are polysynthetic and can have single words that would need an entire sentence to properly be expressed in English.

For example:

ni-kî-nohtê-wâpam-âw-ak

1-PST-want-see.TA-3-PL

(note: hyphens here are present solely to demonstrate the separate morphemes)

 

ni-kî-nohtê-wâpam-âw-ak

1-PST-want-see.TA-3-PL

"I wanted to see them." (animate)

Cree is also considered to be a highly inflectional language with all of its inflection being suffixation with the exception of the four personal prefixes.

Third Person Indefinite Possessor

Woods Cree morphology follows the Western Cree system of morphology. Specific to Woods Cree is use of third person indefinite possessors than in other dialects of Cree. The Proto-Algonquian definite possessor prefix is reconstructed as *me- in Bloomfield (1946)[22] Hamp (1976) expands on Bloomfield's analysis by finding in contrast *we- to be the definite human/animal possessor and *me- to be the indefinite possessor prefix.[22]

As found in other dialects of Cree, the following possessor prefixes are used in Woods Cree:

  • ni- referring to first person possession (in English: 'my')
  • yi- referring to second person possession (in English: 'your')
  • o- referring to third person definite possession (in English: 'his/her')
  • mi- referring to third person indefinite possession (in English: 'someone's')

In most dialects of Cree the prefix mi- is used when describing nouns regarding an undetermined body part, clothing items, and members of kin. For example, a pair of pants (noun requiring a possessor), undetermined in whom they belong to would be preceded with the mi- prefix. In Woods Cree the mi- prefix is not applied to members of kin as well as body parts unique to animals. This difference helps demonstrate the dialect difference between Woods Cree and other types of Cree. Plains Cree, for example, does apply indefinite third person possessors when referring to kin.[22]

Future Markers

In Pukatawagan Woods Cree, specific usage of the future markers have been determined.[23] Woods Cree spoken in this area, like other Cree dialects, uses the future markers ka- as the second person future marker.[23] It has been agreed that this is a reduction of the second person prefix ki- and the future marker ka-.[23] The first person future marker na- however does not follow the same reduction patterns (combining ni- first person prefix and ka- future marker). It has determined instead to be a portmanteau realization of first person and tense categories.[23]

Phono-morphological characteristics

In vowel initial verb stems, Woods Cree will use a vowelless variation of the personal prefixes. For example, the verb aðahwi:w 'he buries him' can use the vowelless, reduced version of the personal prefix nika- recognized as n-. The verb then becomes n-aðahwi:w 'I am burying him'. Woods Cree generally uses the connective variant (as seen below) more frequently than the reduced version, however the reduced version is recognized within the language.[23]

Cree verbs that begin with a vowel use the two different connectors -y- and -t- to join the prefix with the verb:[23]

ni-t-apin 'I am sitting down'
ni-y-apin 'I am sitting down

Both forms are equally acceptable. However, in Woods Cree the -y- connective is fully productive and can be used with nouns as well as verbs.[23] This is unlike other dialects of Cree, for example, Plains Cree where the connective -t- is mainly used. In spite of using both connectives, the -t- connective is recognized to be the more common of the two.[23] The use of -y- is also found to be in free variation with the reduced variant of the ki- prefix:

ki-y-ayamihitona:na:w 'we are talking to each other'
k-ayamina:naw 'we are talking'

In the reduced variant (as seen above in k-ayamina:naw) the initial short vowel is not lengthened as in the non-reduced variant (i.e. ki-y-ayamihitona:na:w).[23] This reduction from ni- or ki- to the form n- or k- is unusual in the Cree language to be used in this manner. As found in Plains Cree, only o- initial verbs are allowed the free variation of using the -t- connective. Also the lengthening of the initial vowel is only allowed in o- initial stems, as seen below:[23]

otine:w 'he takes him'
n-o:tina:w 'I take him'

When a verb beginning with a short vowel is used a trend can be seen in Woods Cree that elides the -i- vowel:[23]

aðahwi:w 'he buries him'
n-aðahwi:w 'I am burying him'

However, when determining the context of the situation, the initial vowel of the verb stem can be lengthened to portray the specific context:

n-aðahwi:w 'I am burying him'
n-a:ðahwi:w 'I will bury him'

In Woods Cree, when combining a word ending with a short vowel with a word beginning with a short vowel, the rule of external sandhi requires the final vowel of the first word to be dropped and the initial vowel of the second word to be lengthened:[23]

awa + iskwi:w > aw i:skwi:w 'this woman'

Independent/conjunct order preverbs

The independent order preverbs used in other dialects of Cree (Plains Cree and Swampy Cree) are ta-, kita-, and ka-.[23] In Woods Cree ta- and kita- only occur in the conjunct order. In the independent order of Woods Cree the preverbs na- and nika- are used. The preverb ka- can be used in both the independent and conjunct orders. The preverb na- can be seen as a portmanteau morpheme, which expresses the first person future context. However, in the second person future context there is no kika- that correlates with the ka- morpheme.[23] The independent order nika- is not commonly used in Woods Cree but is found in situations requiring repetition or clarification:[23]

nika-pi:ha:w (after being asked to repeat comment) 'I'm going to wait for him'

The na- morpheme is classified as a portmanteau because it is a dental [n] and therefore it cannot be a reduced form of nika- when here the [n] assimilates with the following [k] ad becomes a velar nasal.[23]

Northern Alberta Cree (not specifically Woods Cree) has also been determined to use the plural suffix -waˑw- where all other Plains Cree speakers make use of the plural suffix -ik-.[24]

Syntax

Cree is a highly inflected language and much of the syntactic expression happens within the noun or the verb itself.[24] Due to the complex morphological characteristics of the Cree language, the syntactic word order is relatively free in comparison to many other languages. Free expression of discontinuous constituents is found in Cree, also referred to as non-configurational. For example, the sentence "the children killed some ducks" could be expressed in the following six ways:[24]

SVO

awaˑsisak

children

nipaheˑwak

killed

siˑsiˑpa

ducks

awaˑsisak nipaheˑwak siˑsiˑpa

children killed ducks

SOV

awaˑsisak

children

siˑsiˑpa

ducks

nipaheˑwak

killed

awaˑsisak siˑsiˑpa nipaheˑwak

children ducks killed

VSO

nipaheˑwak

killed

awaˑsisak

children

siˑsiˑpa

ducks

nipaheˑwak awaˑsisak siˑsiˑpa

killed children ducks

VOS

nipaheˑwak

killed

siˑsiˑpa

ducks

awaˑsisak

children

nipaheˑwak siˑsiˑpa awaˑsisak

killed ducks children

OVS

siˑsiˑpa

ducks

nipaheˑwak

killed

awaˑsisak

children

siˑsiˑpa nipaheˑwak awaˑsisak

ducks killed children

OSV

siˑsiˑpa

ducks

awaˑsisak

children

nipaheˑwak

killed

siˑsiˑpa awaˑsisak nipaheˑwak

ducks children killed

Word order is instead used determined by information structure.[25] Moreover, due to the extensive morphology, subject and object noun phrases can be left out completely:[24]

nipaheˑwak ('they killed them' - omitting the subject 'children' and object 'ducks' completely)

Obviation

Cree uses three levels of 'person' categories: first person (the speaker), second person (the addressee), and third (neither speaker nor addressee). However, a characterizing aspect of Cree grammar, is that the third person is divided into third person and third person obviative, used when referring to a person who is not in direct relation to the context, sometimes called the 'fourth person'.[24] These nouns are generally understood as being in the 'background' of the conversation whereas the proximate nouns in the conversation are the nouns that are immediately in question. Obviative nouns are marked with the suffix -a[24].

Negation

There are two negative markers in Cree: namoˑya or nama and eˑkaˑ or eˑkaˑya.[24] These different negative markers are found in general to coincide with main and subordinate clauses, where namoˑya is used in main clauses and eˑkaˑ is used in subordinate clauses. The eˑkaˑya marker is found to be connected with imperative sentences.

Questions

When asking a yes–no question in Cree, the question marker ciˑ is found at the end of the first word of the clause.[24]

For example:

kikisiwahitin ciˑ? ('Have I made you angry?)

Indirect yes–no questions use a specific conditional marker equivalent to the English word 'if'. In the Plains Cree dialect (lack of Woods Cree documentation) the conditional marker is kiˑspin.

When asking a content question in Cree, the interrogative pronoun is usually found at the start of the sentence.[24]

For example:

taˑniteˑ eˑ-wiˑ-itohteˑyan? ('Where are you going to?)

Indirect content questions will use the same interrogative pronouns.

Pronouns

The two syntactical pronoun forms are interrogative pronouns and demonstrative pronouns.

Interrogative pronouns are also used in Cree to ask direct questions.[26] Commonly used are the following: who = awína, what = kikway, when = tánispihk, where = tániti, and why = táníhki.[26] However, these words change form when describing singular versus plural nouns. For example: singular = awína and kikway versus plural = awíniki and kikwaya. The animacy of the noun also affects the interrogative pronoun creating four different words that are used when asking a question:[26]

Animate Inanimate English
Singular
tániwa tániwí where is he/she/it?
tána tánima which one?
Plural
tániwíyák tániwíhá where are they?
tániki tánihi which one?

Demonstrative pronouns have two separate forms depending on whether the noun animate or inanimate is:[26]

Animate Inanimate
Singular Plural Singular Plural

awa

awa

this

óki

óki

these

óma

óma

this

óhi

óhi

these

ana

ana

that

aniki

aniki

those

anima

anima

that

anihi

anihi

those

níhí

níhí

that in the distance

níki

níki

those in the distance

níma

níma

that in the distance

níhi

níhi

those in the distance

In Cree, it is possible to put two demonstrative pronouns together to be very specific about the location of an object.[26] A third form of demonstrative denotes an (in)animate subject/object that is far in the distance: níhí (singular animate) níki (plural animate) and níma (singular inanimate) níhi (plural inanimate).

Vocabulary

Due to the polysynthetic nature of the Cree language many words in Cree appear to be very long to other less morphologically expressive languages. For example, in Cree the word tîwâpôhkêwin would be translated in English as 'the making of tea'.[27] Cree vocabulary is then extremely expansive. However, the following terms and phrases give a good impression of the Woods Cree dialectal form of making words:

Woods Cree English
tānisi Hello
tānisi ikwa kītha How are you?
namwāc nānitaw I am fine
tawāw pihtokī Come in(side)
tīniki Thank you
tānisi kititahkamikisisn What are you doing?
kisāstīw It is hot (weather)
thōtin It is windy
kimowan It is raining
wāsīskwan It is clear
otāpānāsk car/vehicle
pimithākan plane
ōsi boat (with motor)
piyak one
nīso two
nisto three
miththihtam He/she is happy
pakwātam He/she is sad
pimohtīw He/she is walking
nipāw He/she is sleeping
kīwīw He/she is going home
ayamiw He/she is talking
nikamow He/she is singing
mīcisow He/she is eating

In the above chart, the bolded letters show the dialect specific th- (/ð/) sound in Woods Cree. In other dialects of Cree this phoneme would be replaced by a different phoneme (such as /y/ in Plains Cree). The letters with a line above them (ō, ā, ī) represent the long vowels, where as the regular letters (o, a, i) represent the short vowel version.

All above listed vocabulary was found at the following website:

http://www.giftoflanguageandculture.ca/flash.htm

This website is designed using digital flash cards to help learn different simple but useful terms and phrases in the 'th' dialect.

Writing System

The writing system and most effective way of writing of Woods Cree is the Cree syllabic system, created by missionary James Evans during the 1830s. The syllabic writing system, however, is slowly being replaced by Roman orthography due to the language being taught in Canadian school systems and especially universities.[28]

The following chart displays the Woods Cree syllabic chart:[19]

Syllable
Vowels
(Nucleus)
ī i o ō a ā
Syllable
Consonants
(Onset)
Final
Consonants
(Coda)
w ᐅᐧ
p
t
k
c
m
n
s
y
th/ð-
Syllable Medial l
w [a] r
Example: h
kwī hk

The basic syllable structure of Woods Cree is (C)(w)V(C)(C) where /h/ will never occur at the beginning or end of syllables and words.

The following examples are of a text called "Encounters with bears" spoken by Mrs. Janet Feitz and transcribed into Woods Cree syllabics as well as the Roman orthography:[29]

Pointed Syllabics Unpointed Syllabics Roman Orthography
ᐁᑿ ᐆᒪ ᐯᔭᒁᐤ ᐁ ᑫᓯᑳᐠ ᐁ ᑫ ᓈᑕᖬᐯᔮᐣ, ᐁᒁᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᑲᐹᐣ, ᐁ ᐅᓭᐦᐊᒁᐤ ᑭᓄᓭᐘᐠ, ᐁᑿ ᑳ ᓂᑕᐏ ᐊᑯᑕᒁᐤ ᐁᑿ ᐊᒁᐚᓂᓯᕁ, ᐁ ᐍ ᐊᔭ ᐍᐢᑿᔁᒁᐤ, ᓇᒣᐢᑎᑿᐠ ᐁ ᐍ ᐅᓭᐦᐊᒁᐤ᙮ ᐁᒁᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᐱᒪᐦᑲᒥᑭᓯᐣ ᑭᓄᓭᐘᐠ ᐁ ᐅᓭᐦᐊᒁᐤ, ᐁᑿ ᓈᓯᐯᑎᒥᕁ ᒫᑲ ᐏᖬ ᐆᒪ ᑳ ᐃᑕᐦᑲᒥᑭᓯᔮᐣ᙮ ᑫᑕᐦᑕᐍ ᑳ ᐯ ᓈᓯᐯᐸᐦᑖᐟ ᐁᑿ ᐊᐘ ᓂᒉᒥᓯᐢ, ᐁ ᐋᐸᓵᐱᐟ ᒫᓇ ᐃᑌ ᑳ ᐅᐦᒋᐸᐦᑖᐟ, ᐁᑯᑌ ᐁ ᐃᑖᐱᐟ, ᐁ ᓭᑭᓯᐟ, ᐁᑯᑕ ᑭᓯᐚᐠ ᐯ ᐊᐱᐤ ᐃᑕ ᐆᒪ ᑲ ᐅᓭᐦᐃᑭᓄᓭᐍᔮᐣ, ᒣᒋᓱᐏᓈᐦᑎᐠ ᐁ ᐊᔮᐠ ᓀᓯᐯᑎᒥᕁ, ᐁᑯᑕ ᐆᒪ ᑳ ᐅᓭᐦᐊᒁᐤ ᑭᓄᓭᐘᐠ᙮ ᐁᑿ ᐆᒪ ᓂᑯᐢᐱᐣ ᐁᑿ ᓂᐍᒉᐚᐤ, ᒥᑐᓂ ᑯᐢᑖᒋᐤ, ᓇᒹᐨ ᑫᒁᕀ ᓂᐚᐸᐦᑌᐣ ᐊᓂᒪ ᑳ ᑯᐢᑕᕁ, ᐁᒁᓂ ᐁᑿ, ᓂᒐᒁᐚᓂᓯᕁ ᓂᑎᑐᐦᑖᐣ, ᓂᑕᑯᑖᐘᐠ ᐁᑿ ᐆᑯ ᓂᑭᓄᓭᒪᐠ ᑳ ᐍᐢᑿᔁᒁᐤ—ᐁ ᑫ ᐴᓇᒫᐣ ᐍᖬ ᒣᓇ ᐱᑕᒫ᙮ ᐁᒁᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᐯᐦᑐᒁᐣ ᐁᑿ, ᐚᐢᑲᐦᐃᑲᓂᓯᕁ ᐁᑯᑌ ᐁᑿ ᒣᓇ ᓂᐱᒪᐦᑲᒥᑭᓯᐣ᙮ ᐋᐢᑲᐤ ᓂᐘᖬᐚᐣ ᐁ ᓂᑕᐏ ᐴᓇᒫᐣ᙮ ᐁᑿ ᐆᒪ ᐁ ᐊᔨᑕᐦᑲᒥᑭᓯᔮᐣ, ᓂᑕᑎ ᐁᑿ ᐋᐱᐦᑖ ᑫᓯᑲᓂ ᒣᒋᓱᐣ, ᐁᒁᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᑎᑐᐦᑖᐣ ᐃᑕ ᑳ ᐍᐢᑿᔁᒁᐤ ᑭᓄᓭᐘᐠ, ᓂᐴᓇᓯᐣ, ᓇᒨᖬ ᒥᐢᑕᐦᐃ ᓂᐴᓀᐣ, ᐍᖬ ᐆᒪ ᐁ ᐃᑌᖨᐦᑕᒫᐣ ᐁᑿ ᐁ ᐍ ᑲᐏᓯᒧᐚᐣ ᐁᑿ ᐁ ᐍ ᐊᖨᐍᐱᔮᐣ᙮ ᐁᒁᓂ ᐁ ᑫ ᐴᓇᓯᔮᐣ, ᐁᒁᓂ ᓂᐯᐦᑕᑿᐣ ᐁᑿ, ᐁᒁᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᑲᐏᓯᒧᐣ ᐁ ᐸ ᐱᒥᓯᓂᔮᐣ ᐁ ᐊᔭᒥᐦᒋᑫᔮᐣ, ᑫᑕᐦᑕᐍ ᐁᑿ ᒫᑲ ᐊᐘ ᓂᒉᒥᓯᐢ, ᓲᐢᒁᐨ ᐁᑿ ᑿᔭᐢᐠ ᒥᑭᓯᒧᐤ, ᑿᔭᐢᐠ ᐁ ᑯᐢᑖᒋᐟ᙮ ᐁᒁᓂ ᓂᑌᑇᑖᐤ ᐁᑿ, "ᐴᓊᐏᑕ"᙮ ᐁᑿ ᐅᒪ ᐯᔭᑿᐤ ᐁ ᑫᓯᑲᐠ ᐁ ᑫ ᓇᑕᖬᐯᔭᐣ, ᐁᑿᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᑲᐸᐣ, ᐁ ᐅᓭᐊᑿᐤ ᑭᓄᓭᐘᐠ, ᐁᑿ ᑲ ᓂᑕᐏ ᐊᑯᑕᑿᐤ ᐁᑿ ᐊᑿᐊᓂᓯᕁ, ᐁ ᐍ ᐊᔭ ᐍᐢᑿᔁᑿᐤ, ᓇᒣᐢᑎᑿᐠ ᐁ ᐍ ᐅᓭᐊᑿᐤ᙮ ᐁᑿᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᐱᒪᑲᒥᑭᓯᐣ ᑭᓄᓭᐘᐠ ᐁ ᐅᓭᐊᑿᐤ, ᐁᑿ ᓇᓯᐯᑎᒥᕁ ᒪᑲ ᐏᖬ ᐅᒪ ᑲ ᐃᑕᑲᒥᑭᓯᔭᐣ᙮ ᑫᑕᑕᐍ ᑲ ᐯ ᓇᓯᐯᐸᑕᐟ ᐁᑿ ᐊᐘ ᓂᒉᒥᓯᐢ, ᐁ ᐊᐸᓴᐱᐟ ᒪᓇ ᐃᑌ ᑲ ᐅᒋᐸᑕᐟ, ᐁᑯᑌ ᐁ ᐃᑕᐱᐟ, ᐁ ᓭᑭᓯᐟ, ᐁᑯᑕ ᑭᓯᐘᐠ ᐯ ᐊᐱᐤ ᐃᑕ ᐅᒪ ᑲ ᐅᓭᐃᑭᓄᓭᐍᔭᐣ, ᒣᒋᓱᐏᓇᑎᐠ ᐁ ᐊᔭᐠ ᓀᓯᐯᑎᒥᕁ, ᐁᑯᑕ ᐅᒪ ᑲ ᐅᓭᐊᑿᐤ ᑭᓄᓭᐘᐠ᙮ ᐁᑿ ᐅᒪ ᓂᑯᐢᐱᐣ ᐁᑿ ᓂᐍᒉᐘᐤ, ᒥᑐᓂ ᑯᐢᑕᒋᐤ, ᓇᒷᐨ ᑫᑲᕀ ᓂᐘᐸᑌᐣ ᐊᓂᒪ ᑲ ᑯᐢᑕᕁ, ᐁᑿᓂ ᐁᑿ, ᓂᒐᑿᐘᓂᓯᕁ ᓂᑎᑐᑕᐣ, ᓂᑕᑯᑕᐘᐠ ᐁᑿ ᐅᑯ ᓂᑭᓄᓭᒪᐠ ᑲ ᐍᐢᑿᔁᑿᐤ—ᐁ ᑫ ᐳᓇᒪᐣ ᐍᖬ ᒣᓇ ᐱᑕᒪ᙮ ᐁᑿᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᐯᑐᑿᐣ ᐁᑿ, ᐘᐢᑲᐃᑲᓂᓯᕁ ᐁᑯᑌ ᐁᑿ ᒣᓇ ᓂᐱᒪᑲᒥᑭᓯᐣ᙮ ᐊᐢᑲᐤ ᓂᐘᖬᐘᐣ ᐁ ᓂᑕᐏ ᐳᓇᒪᐣ᙮ ᐁᑿ ᐅᒪ ᐁ ᐊᔨᑕᑲᒥᑭᓯᔭᐣ, ᓂᑕᑎ ᐁᑿ ᐊᐱᑕ ᑫᓯᑲᓂ ᒣᒋᓱᐣ, ᐁᑿᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᑎᑐᑕᐣ ᐃᑕ ᑲ ᐍᐢᑿᔁᑿᐤ ᑭᓄᓭᐘᐠ, ᓂᐳᓇᓯᐣ, ᓇᒧᖬ ᒥᐢᑕᐃ ᓂᐳᓀᐣ, ᐍᖬ ᐅᒪ ᐁ ᐃᑌᖨᑕᒪᐣ ᐁᑿ ᐁ ᐍ ᑲᐏᓯᒧᐘᐣ ᐁᑿ ᐁ ᐍ ᐊᖨᐍᐱᔭᐣ᙮ ᐁᑿᓂ ᐁ ᑫ ᐳᓇᓯᔭᐣ, ᐁᑿᓂ ᓂᐯᐦᑕᑿᐣ ᐁᑿ, ᐁᑿᓂ ᐁᑿ ᓂᑲᐏᓯᒧᐣ ᐁ ᐸ ᐱᒥᓯᓂᔭᐣ ᐁ ᐊᔭᒥᒋᑫᔭᐣ, ᑫᑕᑕᐍ ᐁᑿ ᒪᑲ ᐊᐘ ᓂᒉᒥᓯᐢ, ᓱᐢᑿᐨ ᐁᑿ ᑿᔭᐢᐠ ᒥᑭᓯᒧᐤ, ᑿᔭᐢᐠ ᐁ ᑯᐢᑕᒋᐟ᙮ ᐁᑿᓂ ᓂᑌᑅᑕᐤ ᐁᑿ, "ᐳᓊᐏᑕ"᙮ Īkwa ōma pīyakwāw ī-kīsikāk ī-kī-nātaðapīyān, īkwāni īkwa nikapān, ī-osīhakwāw kinosīwak, īkwa kā-nitawi-akotakwāw īkwa akwāwānisihk, ī-wī-aya-wīskwaswakwāw, nimīstikwak ī-wī-osīhakwāw. Īkwāni īkwa nipimahkamikisin kinosīwak ī-osīhakwāw, īkwa nāsipītimihk māka wiða ōma kā-itahkamikisiyān. Kītahtawī kā-pī-nāsipīpahtāt īkwa awa nicīmisin, ī-āpasāpit māna itī kā-ohcipahtāt, īkotī ī-itāpit, ī-sīpisit, īkota kisiwāk pī-apiw ita ōma ka-osīhikinosīwīyān, mīcisowināhtik ī-ayāk nīsipītimihk, īkota ōma kā-osīhakwāw kinosīwak. Īkwa ōma nikospin īkwa niwīcīwāw, mitoni kostāciw, nimwāc kīkwāy niwāpahtīn anima kā-kostahk, īkwāni īkwa, nacakwāwānisihk nititohtān, nitakotāwak īkwa ōko nikinosīmak kā-wīskwaswakwāw—ī-kē-pōnamān wiða mīna pitamā. Īkwāni īkwa nipīhtokwān īkwa, wāskahikanisihk īkotī īkwa mīna nipimahkamikisin. Āskaw niwaðawān ī-nitawi-pōnamān. Īkwa ōma ī-ayitahkamikisiyān, nitati īkwa āpihtā kīsikani mīcison, īkwāni īkwa nititohtān ita kā-wīskwaswakwāw kinosīwak, nipōnasin, namōða mistahi nipōnīn, wīða ōma ī-itīðihtamān īkwa ī-wī-kawisimowān īkwa ī-wī-aðiwīpiyān. Īkwāni ī-kī-pōnasiyān, īkwāni nipīhtokwān īkwa, īkwāni īkwa nikawisimon ī-pa-pimisiniyān ī-ayamihcikīyān, kītahtawī īkwa māka awa nicīmisin, sōskwāc īkwa kwayask mikisimow, kwayask ī-kostācit. Īkwāni nitīpwātāw īkwa, "pōnwīwita."

References

  1. ^ a b Woods Cree at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c "Census Profile, 2016 Census". Statistics Canada. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  3. ^ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian (2022-05-24). "Cree-Montagnais-Naskapi". Glottolog. Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. Archived from the original on 2022-10-15. Retrieved 2022-10-29.
  4. ^ Official Languages of the Northwest Territories Archived December 6, 2013, at the Wayback Machine (map)
  5. ^ "Cree". www.languagegeek.com. Retrieved 2015-11-26.
  6. ^ "Algic". Retrieved 2015-09-30.
  7. ^ "E-MELD School of Best Practice: Potawatomi Family Tree". emeld.org. 2006-08-04. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
  8. ^ Mithun, Marianne (2001-06-07). The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-29875-9.
  9. ^ a b c d Sturtevant, William C. (1978). Handbook of North American Indians: Subarctic. Government Printing Office. p. 256. ISBN 978-0-16-004578-3.
  10. ^ "Saskatchewan Indian Cultural Centre". www.sicc.sk.ca. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
  11. ^ a b c d Smith, James G. E. (1987-08-01). "The Western Woods Cree: Anthropological Myth and Historical Reality". American Ethnologist. 14 (3): 434–448. doi:10.1525/ae.1987.14.3.02a00020. ISSN 1548-1425. JSTOR 644951.
  12. ^ "Edward S. Curtis's The North American Indian - volume 18 page 55". curtis.library.northwestern.edu. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
  13. ^ "Facts for Kids: Cree Indians (Crees)". www.bigorrin.org. Retrieved 2015-11-26.
  14. ^ Bureau, Government of Canada, Public Works and Government Services Canada - Translation. "Cree language facts for editors of English and French – Articles – From Our Contributors – Language Portal of Canada". www.noslangues-ourlanguages.gc.ca. Retrieved 2015-11-27. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Sutton, Mark Q. (2015-08-26). Introduction to Native North America By Mark Sutton. ISBN 978-1-317-34721-7. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
  16. ^ "The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan | Details". esask.uregina.ca. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
  17. ^ a b c Saskatchewan, Cory Toth - Encyclopedia Of. "The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan | Details". esask.uregina.ca. Retrieved 2015-10-06.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Starks, Donna; Ballard, Elaine (2005-01-01). "Woods Cree /ð/: An Unusual Type of Sonorant". International Journal of American Linguistics. 71 (1): 102–115. doi:10.1086/430580. JSTOR 10.1086/430580. S2CID 143846492.
  19. ^ a b "Online Cree Dictionary, Cree Language Resource Project, Maskwacis Plains Cree, Saskatchewan Cree, Woods Cree". www.creedictionary.com. Retrieved 2015-10-16.
  20. ^ Starks, Donna Joy (1992). Aspects of Woods Cree syntax. Ann Arbor: UMI.
  21. ^ "Search results". www.creedictionary.com. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  22. ^ a b c Brightman, Robert A. (1985). "The Indefinite Possessor Prefix in Woods Cree". International Journal of American Linguistics. 51 (4): 353–356. doi:10.1086/465890. JSTOR 1265261. S2CID 145445275.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Greensmith, Jennifer, M. (1985). "Future Markers in Woods Cree". Papers of the Sixteenth Algonquian Conference.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Sketch of Cree, an Algonquian Language, In: Handbook of North American Indians, Vol 17: Language". search.language-archives.org. Retrieved 2015-10-30.
  25. ^ Starks, Donna (1993). "The effect of information status on word order: Evidence from Woods Cree". Linguistica Atlantica. 15: 165–173. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  26. ^ a b c d e "Our Languages ~ Swampy Cree ~ Basic Morphology and Syntax". www.sicc.sk.ca. Retrieved 2015-10-20.
  27. ^ "Online Cree Dictionary, Cree Language, Cree: Words, Alberta Elders' Dictionary, Maskwacis". www.creedictionary.com. Retrieved 2015-11-12.
  28. ^ "Cree, Woods". Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  29. ^ "ᓀᐦᐃᖬᐍᐏᐣ Woods Cree Text". www.languagegeek.com. Retrieved 2015-11-10.

Notes

  1. ^ Unicode contains precomposed characters for all syllabics with a medial /w/, for example ᑵ (kwī) is a single code point: U+1475 CANADIAN SYLLABICS WEST-CREE KWE), however the Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics block separately encodes a middle dot glyph for syllabics, U+1427 CANADIAN SYLLABICS FINAL MIDDLE DOT. Although this glyph can be used to represent the middle-dot standalone, its name containing the word "FINAL" (syllabic coda) as well as its general category of Lo, or Letter, other makes it unsuitable to encode the medial-w as diacritical mark.

Read other articles:

Daf

Daf Daf (Persia: دف, romanized: dafcode: fa is deprecated ; bahasa Kurdi: def ,دەف;[1][2]) adalah sebuah drum bingkai Kurdi dan Persia yang digunakan dalam musik populer dan klasik. Selain itu, apakah itu juga digunakan dalam upacara keagamaan di kalangan Kurdi. Daf juga dianggap sebagai alat musik nasional Pakistan. Instrumen ini digambarkan dalam lukisan gua mesolitik di Lakha Juar, Bhimbhetka dan dalam bantuan Kekaisaran Asyur. Nama Pahlavi (bahasa Iran kuno) ...

 

Lokasi County Louth\ County Louth (bahasa Irlandia: Contae Lú) ialah sebuah county di Republik Irlandia, yang terletak di Provinsi Leinster. County Louth mencakup wilayah seluas 820 km² dan berpenduduk 110.894 jiwa (2006). Ini adalah county paling sempit di Irlandia. Ibu kota administratif county ini ada di Dundalk, dan kota terbesarnya ada di Drogheda, dan kedua kota itu kadang-kadang dinyatakan sebagai kota terbesar di Republik Irlandia. Permukiman utama di County Louth Kota Ardee Dr...

 

Alberto Burri, fotografato da Nanda Lanfranco Alberto Burri (Città di Castello, 12 marzo 1915 – Nizza, 15 febbraio 1995) è stato un artista e pittore italiano. Indice 1 Biografia 2 Archivio 3 Mostre 4 Opere (selezione) 5 Esposizioni personali postume - selezione 6 Alberto Burri nei musei 7 Note 8 Bibliografia 9 Voci correlate 10 Altri progetti 11 Collegamenti esterni Biografia Nacque a Città di Castello (Perugia) il 12 marzo 1915, primogenito di Pietro, commerciante di vini, e di Carolin...

1529 treaty between the House of Pomerania and the House of Hohenzollern Treaty of GrimnitzJoachim I Nestor, Elector of BrandenburgTypeLegal status and succession in the Duchy of PomeraniaSigned26 August 1529 (1529-08-26)LocationGrimnitz castleEffective1530ConditionInvestiture at the Imperial Diet in AugsburgSignatories Joachim I Nestor, Elector of Brandenburg Barnim IX, Duke of Pomerania Georg I, Duke of Pomerania Parties House of Hohenzollern House of Pomerania LanguageGerman...

 

Dominican baseball player (born 1999) Baseball player Deivi GarcíaGarcía with the Trenton Thunder in 2019Chicago White Sox – No. 64PitcherBorn: (1999-05-19) May 19, 1999 (age 24)Bonao, Dominican RepublicBats: RightThrows: RightMLB debutAugust 30, 2020, for the New York YankeesMLB statistics (through April 7, 2024)Win–loss record3–7Earned run average5.31Strikeouts56 Teams New York Yankees (2020–2021, 2023) Chicago White Sox (2023–present) Deivi Anderson García ...

 

Chicago White Sox baseball park (1910–1990) This article is about the original Comiskey Park. For the existing stadium that once carried this name, see Guaranteed Rate Field. Comiskey ParkThe Baseball Palace of the WorldOld Comiskey ParkWhite Sox ParkComiskey Park in 1990, its final seasonFormer namesWhite Sox Park(1910–1912, 1962–1975)Location324 West 35th StreetChicago, IllinoisCoordinates41°49′54″N 87°38′03″W / 41.83167°N 87.63417°W / 41.83167; -87...

Jio

Indian telecommunications company Not to be confused with Reliance Communications or Jio Platforms. Reliance Jio Infocomm LimitedJio's headquarters in RCP, Navi MumbaiTrade nameJioCompany typeSubsidiaryIndustryTelecommunicationsFounded15 February 2007; 17 years ago (2007-02-15)FounderMukesh AmbaniHeadquartersReliance Corporate Park, Ghansoli, Navi Mumbai, Maharashtra, IndiaArea servedIndiaKey peopleAkash Ambani(Chairman)[1]Sandip Das(Managing Director)ProductsFixed-l...

 

信徒Believe类型奇幻、科幻开创阿方索·卡隆主演 Johnny Sequoyah Jake McLaughlin Delroy Lindo 凯尔·麦克拉克伦 西耶娜·盖尔利 鄭智麟 Tracy Howe Arian Moayed 国家/地区美国语言英语季数1集数12每集长度43分钟制作执行制作 阿方索·卡隆 J·J·艾布拉姆斯 Mark Friedman 布赖恩·伯克 机位多镜头制作公司坏机器人制片公司华纳兄弟电视公司播出信息 首播频道全国广播公司播出日期2014年3月10日...

 

Duchess of Galliera Infanta Eulalia of SpainDuchess of GallieraBorn(1864-02-12)12 February 1864Madrid, Kingdom of SpainDied8 March 1958(1958-03-08) (aged 94)Irun, Spanish StateBurialEl EscorialSpouse Infante Antonio, Duke of Galliera ​ ​(m. 1886; died 1930)​IssueInfante Alfonso, Duke of GallieraInfante Luis FernandoNamesMaría Eulalia Francisca de Asís Margarita Roberta Isabel Francisca de Paula Cristina María de la PiedadHouseBourbonFat...

Luigi De Canio Informasi pribadiTanggal lahir 26 September 1957 (umur 66)Tempat lahir Matera, ItaliaPosisi bermain BekKarier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)1975–1977 Matera 46 (0)1977–1978 Brindisi 32 (1)1978–1979 Matera 32 (0)1979–1981 Chieti 61 (0)1981 Salernitana 3 (0)1981–1986 Matera 141 (2)1986 Livorno 5 (1)1986–1987 Galatina Pro Italia 8 (0)1987–1989 Pisticci Kepelatihan1988–1993 Pisticci1993–1995 Savoia1995–1996 Siena1996–1997 Carpi1997–1998 Lucchese1998–1...

 

この項目には、一部のコンピュータや閲覧ソフトで表示できない文字が含まれています(詳細)。 数字の大字(だいじ)は、漢数字の一種。通常用いる単純な字形の漢数字(小字)の代わりに同じ音の別の漢字を用いるものである。 概要 壱万円日本銀行券(「壱」が大字) 弐千円日本銀行券(「弐」が大字) 漢数字には「一」「二」「三」と続く小字と、「壱」「�...

 

Данио-рерио Научная классификация Домен:ЭукариотыЦарство:ЖивотныеПодцарство:ЭуметазоиБез ранга:Двусторонне-симметричныеБез ранга:ВторичноротыеТип:ХордовыеПодтип:ПозвоночныеИнфратип:ЧелюстноротыеГруппа:Костные рыбыКласс:Лучепёрые рыбыПодкласс:Новопёрые рыбыИн�...

Extinct Turkic tribal confederation Not to be confused with Bulgarians or Bulgarian Turks. Bulgars led by Khan Krum pursue the Byzantines at the Battle of Versinikia (813) The Bulgars (also Bulghars, Bulgari, Bolgars, Bolghars, Bolgari,[1] Proto-Bulgarians[2]) were Turkic semi-nomadic warrior tribes that flourished in the Pontic–Caspian steppe and the Volga region during the 5th[3]-7th century. They became known as nomadic equestrians in the Volga-Ural region, but so...

 

2016年美國總統選舉 ← 2012 2016年11月8日 2020 → 538個選舉人團席位獲勝需270票民意調查投票率55.7%[1][2] ▲ 0.8 %   获提名人 唐納·川普 希拉莉·克林頓 政党 共和黨 民主党 家鄉州 紐約州 紐約州 竞选搭档 迈克·彭斯 蒂姆·凱恩 选举人票 304[3][4][註 1] 227[5] 胜出州/省 30 + 緬-2 20 + DC 民選得票 62,984,828[6] 65,853,514[6]...

 

هذه المقالة تحتاج للمزيد من الوصلات للمقالات الأخرى للمساعدة في ترابط مقالات الموسوعة. فضلًا ساعد في تحسين هذه المقالة بإضافة وصلات إلى المقالات المتعلقة بها الموجودة في النص الحالي. (مارس 2018) مقاطعة تشاريتون     الإحداثيات 39°31′N 92°58′W / 39.52°N 92.96°W / 39.52; -92.96...

Polish footballer Przemysław Szymiński Szymiński in 2022 with FrosinonePersonal informationFull name Przemysław SzymińskiDate of birth (1994-06-24) 24 June 1994 (age 29)Place of birth Katowice, PolandHeight 1.84 m (6 ft 1⁄2 in)Position(s) Centre-backTeam informationCurrent team Reggiana(on loan from Frosinone)Number 25Senior career*Years Team Apps (Gls)2012–2014 Rozwój Katowice 80 (3)2014–2017 Wisła Płock 81 (3)2017–2019 Palermo 48 (1)2019– Frosinone ...

 

此條目缺少有關频率 (统计学)的信息。 (2024年5月29日)請擴充此條目相關信息。討論頁可能有詳細細節。 三個閃動的光圓,從最低頻率(上端)至最高頻率(下端)。 频率(frequency)又稱週率,是物理学上描述某具规律週期性的现象或事件,在每单位时间内(即每秒)重复发生的次数(週期數,即循环次数);通常以符号 f {\displaystyle f} 或 ν {\displaystyle \nu } 表示。频率�...

 

The location of the state of Georgia in the United States of America Main article: Georgia (U.S. state) See also: Outline of Georgia (U.S. state) The following is an alphabetical list of articles related to the U.S. state of Georgia. Contents 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z See also 0–9 An enlargeable map of the state of Georgia .ga.us – Internet second-level domain for the state of Georgia 4th state to ratify the Constitution of the United States A Adams-Onís ...

American guitarist Larry LaLondeLaLonde performing with Primus in 2012Background informationBirth nameReid Laurence LaLondeAlso known asLerBorn (1968-09-12) September 12, 1968 (age 55)Oakland, California, U.S.Genres Alternative metal funk metal funk rock progressive rock thrash metal death metal Occupation(s)GuitaristYears active1984–presentMember ofPrimusFormerly of Possessed Blind Illusion Musical artist Reid Laurence Larry LaLonde (born September 12, 1968), also known as Ler LaLonde...

 

اضطراب نفسي صورة توضح ثمانية نساء تم تشخيص إصابتهن العقلية في القرن التاسع عشر (الرسام أرماند غوتييه)صورة توضح ثمانية نساء تم تشخيص إصابتهن العقلية في القرن التاسع عشر (الرسام أرماند غوتييه) معلومات عامة الاختصاص طب نفسي،  وعلم النفس السريري،  وعلاج نفسي  الأسباب ا...