- "Aleut";
plural often "Alutiit"), also
called by
their ancestral name
Sugpiaq (/ˈsʊɡˌbjɑːk/ SUUG-byahk or /ˈsʊɡpiˌæk/ SUUG-pee-AK;
plural often "Sugpiat")...
- The
Alutiiq language (also
called Sugpiak,
Sugpiaq, Sugcestun, Suk, Supik,
Pacific Gulf Yupik, Gulf Yupik, Koniag-Chugach) is a
close relative to the...
-
Chugach /ˈtʃuːɡætʃ/,
Chugach Sugpiaq or
Chugachigmiut is the name of an
Alaska Native people in the
region of the
Kenai Peninsula and
Prince William Sound...
-
Wounded Knee of Alaska, was an
attack and m****acre of
Koniag Alutiiq (
Sugpiaq)
people in
August 1784 at
Refuge Rock near
Kodiak Island by
Russian fur...
- and
comes from the Sugt'stun (Alutiit'stun)
dialect of
Chugach Sugpiaq, a
group of
Sugpiaq ("real people,"
better known as Alutiiq) for an Eyak village...
-
Portlock (
Sugpiaq: Arrulaa'ik) is a
ghost town in the U.S.
state of Alaska,
located on the
southern edge of the
Kenai Peninsula,
around 16
miles (26 km)...
-
speak Inuktun. The four
Yupik languages, by contrast,
including Alutiiq (
Sugpiaq),
Central Alaskan Yup'ik,
Naukan (Naukanski), and
Siberian Yupik, are distinct...
- the
Inuit and Iñupiat.
Yupik peoples include the following: Alutiiq, or
Sugpiaq, of the
Alaska Peninsula and
coastal and
island areas of
southcentral Alaska...
-
Prince William Sound (
Sugpiaq: Suungaaciq) is a
sound off the Gulf of
Alaska on the
south coast of the U.S.
state of Alaska. It is
located on the east...
- Yupik, Aleut). Therefore, the
Aleut (Unangan) and
Yupik peoples (Alutiiq/
Sugpiaq,
Central Yup'ik,
Siberian Yupik), who live in
Alaska and Siberia, at least...