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On Sat, 02 Apr 2005 18:23:32 -0500, Paul Schilter
""paulschilter\"@comcast dot net" wrote: Jim, Didn't know that. Where does the term Eskimos come from? I take it they wish to be called "Inuit"? From http://www.alaskan.com/docs/eskimo.html Eskimo The Eskimo are the native inhabitants of the seacoasts of the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of North America and the northeastern tip of Siberia. Their habitation area extends over four countries: the United States, Canada, the USSR, and Greenland. Of the more than 90,000 Eskimo in this region, the greater part live south of the Arctic Circle, with approximately 28,000 on the Aleutian Islands and in Alaska; 17,000 in Canada; 1,500 in Siberia; and 45,000 in Greenland. The word Eskimo is not an Eskimo word. It means "eaters of raw meat" and was used by the Algonquin Indians of eastern Canada for these hardy neighbors who wore animal-skin clothing and were adept hunters. The name became commonly employed by European explorers and now is generally used, even by Eskimo. Their own term for themselves is Inuit (the Yupik variant is Yuit), which means the "real people." The Eskimo inhabit one of the most inclement regions of the world. Their land is mostly tundra--low, flat, treeless plains where the ground remains permanently frozen except for a few inches of the surface during the brief summer season. Although some groups are settled on rivers and depend on fishing, and others follow inland caribou herds, most Eskimo traditionally have lived primarily as hunters of maritime mammals (seals, walrus, and whales), and the structure and ethos of their culture have always been fundamentally oriented to the sea. One of the most striking aspects of traditional Eskimo culture is its relative homogeneity across more than 8,000 km (5,000 mi) of the vast expanses of the Arctic. The main institutional and psychological patterns of the culture--religious, social, and economic--are much the same. There are some differences in traditional kinship systems, however, especially in the western regions, and the language is divided into two major dialectical groups, the Inupik speakers (Greenland to western Alaska) and the Yupik speakers (southwestern Alaska and Siberia) Later, Tom |
#2
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Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
From http://www.alaskan.com/docs/eskimo.html Shame on them for spread untruths... :-) Eskimo The Eskimo are the native inhabitants of the seacoasts of the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of North America and the northeastern tip of Siberia. Their habitation area extends over four countries: the United States, Canada, the USSR, and Greenland. Of the more than 90,000 Eskimo in this region, the greater part live south of the Arctic Circle, with approximately 28,000 on the Aleutian Islands and in Alaska; 17,000 in Canada; 1,500 in Siberia; and 45,000 in Greenland. The word Eskimo is not an Eskimo word. It means "eaters of raw meat" I've posted facts and a couple cites on this in another message. That is not the actual etymology of the word, though it makes a good story so people like it. and was used by the Algonquin Indians of eastern Canada for these hardy neighbors who wore animal-skin clothing and were adept hunters. The name became commonly employed by European explorers and now is generally used, even by Eskimo. Their own term for themselves is Inuit (the Yupik variant is Yuit), which means the "real people." Yuit just means a group of people. Yupik means "Genuine people". Another word that is actually the same as Yupik is Yupiaq. The Eskimo inhabit one of the most inclement regions of the world. Their land is mostly tundra--low, flat, treeless plains where the ground remains permanently frozen except for a few inches of the surface during the brief summer season. Although some groups are settled on rivers and depend on fishing, and others follow inland caribou herds, most Eskimo traditionally have lived primarily as hunters of maritime mammals (seals, walrus, and whales), and the structure and ethos of their culture have always been fundamentally oriented to the sea. That is quite accurate. One of the most striking aspects of traditional Eskimo culture is its relative homogeneity across more than 8,000 km (5,000 mi) of the vast expanses of the Arctic. The main institutional and psychological patterns of the culture--religious, social, and economic--are much the same. There are some differences in traditional kinship systems, however, especially in the western regions, and the language is I don't know what they mean by "especially in the western regions". Not that I know of... divided into two major dialectical groups, the Inupik speakers (Greenland to western Alaska) and the Yupik speakers (southwestern Alaska and Siberia) And that is accurate too. The Inupiaq (that is the what it is called in Alaska) language broke away from Proto-Eskimo perhaps 1500-2000 years ago, and rapidly spread from the Bering Straits area eastward to Greenland. Today the Inupiaq language presents a continuum from west to east, though at the fringes there are some significant variations (influence by Yupik in the west and ritual word replacement in Eastern Greenland). Otherwise they can easily communicate with each other. Yupik on the other hand has been in place for several thousands of years, and in some cases even relatively close villages speak dialects so different that they cannot understand each other. It actually took study by linguists to discover that it was one language with several very distinct dialects as opposed to just several languages. Note that occasionally you'll see the word "Yup'ik", which is pronounced exactly the same as Yupik, but it is used to refer to the Central Alaskan Yupik people or language. -- Floyd L. Davidson http://web.newsguy.com/floyd_davidson Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) |
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