- (Inuktitut: ᖃᓂᐅᔮᖅᐸᐃᑦ, romanized: qaniujaaqpait, or ᑎᑎᕋᐅᓯᖅ ᓄᑖᖅ,
titirausiq nutaaq) is an abugida-type
writing system used in
Canada by the Inuktitut-speaking...
- (PDF) on 4
February 2007. "Broken Promises: The High
Arctic Relocation".
Nutaaq.com.
Retrieved 24
January 2011. Parkin,
Raleigh (March 1966). "The Arctic...
-
Retrieved 22
October 2020. "Website for
Invasion of the Beer People".
Nutaaq.com.
Archived from the
original on 26
April 2021. Kaplan, Don (2
April 2008)...
-
unrelated Inuk
woman and her infant, who were
named by the
English as
Arnaq and
Nutaaq. The
three were
among the
first Inuit and the
first indigenous people from...
-
Arcand Edited by Paul Raphaël
Music by Joe
Barrucco Production company Nutaaq Media Release date 2004 (2004)
Running time 11
minutes Country Canada Languages...
- find the
Northwest P****age. She, her
infant son (named by the
English as
Nutaaq) and an Inuk man
named as
Kalicho were
among the
first Inuit and
first indigenous...
- the
North West p****age, a man, Kalicho, a woman, Arnaq, and Arnaq's son
Nutaaq. All died soon
after their arrival in
Bristol in
October 1577.
Kalicho and...
- The
syllabary used to
write Inuktitut (titirausiq
nutaaq). The
extra characters with the dots
represent long vowels; in the
Latin transcription, the vowel...
-
different language family from Pawnee. The
voiceover was a
recording of
Doreen Nutaaq Simmonds reading a poem from a John
Luther Adams recording; the
words originally...
- The
first Inuit people to see Europe— Kalicho, Arnaq, and Arnaq's son,
Nutaaq— are
brought as
captives of
Martin Frobisher when HMS
Gabriel arrived in...