- to as
Ingalik by
Osgood (1936).
While this term
sometimes still appears in the literature, it is
today considered pejorative. The word "
Ingalik" is from...
- the name Anvik-Shageluk
Ingalik (also
Kuskokwim Ingalik and
Yukon Ingalik) is used for Deg Hitʼan, and the name
McGrath Ingalik is used for
Upper Kuskokwim...
- Hwt'ana), and
historically Kolchan, Goltsan,
Tundra Kolosh, and
McGrath Ingalik are an
Alaskan Athabaskan people of the Athabaskan-speaking ethnolinguistic...
-
Tanaina (Ht’ana)
Ahtna or
Copper River Athabascan (Hwt’aene) Deg Hit’an or
Ingalik (Hitʼan)
Holikachuk (Hitʼan)
Koyukon (Hut’aane)
Upper Kuskokwim or Kolchan...
- Kenaitze)
Central Alaska–Yukon
subgroup Deg
Xinag (also
known as Deg Hitʼan,
Ingalik (deprecated))
Holikachuk (also
known as Innoko)
Koyukon (also
known as...
-
Deloy Ges is the Deg
Xinag language name for the
village of Anvik, Alaska, home to the Deg Hit'an people. More specifically, it
refers to
Anvik Hill, also...
-
Inuit Guarani Haida **** Gap
complex Indigenous peoples of
California Ingalik Innu
Inuit Iñupiat
Karankawa Kawésqar
Kiowa Koyukon Lakota Makah Maritime...
-
Samoans Gilbertese Marshallese Chuukese Yapese Palauans Ifugao North America Ingalik Aleut Copper Eskimo Montagnais Mi'kmaq
Saulteaux (Ojibwa)
Slave Kaska (Nahane)...
-
Languages / Po****tion and
Speaker Statistics Snow,
Jeanne H. (1981).
Ingalik. In
Subarctic (pp. 602–617).
Handbook of
North American Indians (W. C....
-
Census website".
United States Census Bureau.
Retrieved January 31, 2008. "
Ingalik". www.mnsu.edu.
Archived from the
original on
November 13, 2005. Retrieved...