-
language family consists of two languages:
Hanis (also
known as Coos) and
Miluk. Both are extinct. The
Confederated Tribes of Coos,
Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw...
- T:transitive
marker EST:established
Miluk, also
known as
Lower Coquille from its location, is one of two
Coosan languages. It
shares more than half of...
-
Oregon are a
federally recognized Native American tribe of
Hanis Coos,
Miluk Coos,
Lower Umpqua (or Kuitsh), and
Siuslaw people in Oregon. The service...
- the
southern Oregon coast. Both
languages are now extinct.
Coosan Hanis †
Miluk † (a.k.a.
Lower Coquille)
Melville Jacobs (1939) says that the languages...
-
retained the
older pronunciation. The
Coquille are part
Lower Coquille Miluk and part
Lower Rogue River Athabascan “tribes,”
Tututni which included the...
-
Statistical Area. Coos Bay is the
homeland of two
bands of
Native people,
Miluk and Hanis. Both
today are
often referred to as "Coos".
Lewis and
Clark noted...
- Aleut, Menominee, Mescalero-Chiricahua, Miami-Illinois, Mikasuki, Mi'kmaq,
Miluk, Mitchigamea,
Mobilian Jargon, Mohawk,
Mohawk Dutch, Mohegan-Pequot, Mojave...
- (5,659.62) yes Coos,
Lower Umpqua, and
Siuslaw Reservation Hanis Coos,
Miluk Coos,
Siuslaw Oregon 47 0.22 (0.58) 0.0037 (0.0097) 0.23 (0.59) yes Coquille...
- two languages,
collecting 32 Coos myth
texts in
Miluk,
eight in Hanis, and two in both
Hanis and
Miluk for
comparison of the two languages. Wax-cylinder...
-
families in 1702
Bienville 211
Northwest Coast Oregon Country Coos and
Miluk 2,000 1780
James Mooney 212
Southwest Mexican Cession Qnigyuma (Jalliquamay)...