- and Company. MacLean, Edna Ahgeak. “Culture and
Change for Iñupiat and
Yupiks of Alaska.” 2004. Alaska. 12 Nov 2008 Mithun, Marianne. (1999). The languages...
- of the 1,100
Yupiks on St.
Lawrence Island still speak the St.
Lawrence dialect of this language.
About 200 of the 1,200
Siberian Yupiks in
Russia still...
- IPA § Brackets and
transcription delimiters.
Siberian Yupiks, or
Yuits (Russian: Юиты), are a
Yupik people who
reside along the
coast of the
Chukchi Peninsula...
-
Yupik may
refer to:
Yupik peoples, a
group of
Indigenous peoples of
Alaska and the
Russian Far East
Yupik languages, a
group of
Eskaleut languages Yupꞌik...
-
Native Iñupiat, the
Canadian Inuit, and the
Greenlandic Inuit) and the
Yupik (or Yuit) of
eastern Siberia and Alaska. A
related third group, the Aleut...
-
Naukan Yupik language or
Naukan Siberian Yupik language (Naukan
Yupik: Нывуӄаӷмистун; Nuvuqaghmiistun) is a
critically endangered Eskimo language spoken...
-
distal form.
Small changes have been made
towards teaching Yupʼik to the
native Alaskan Yupʼiks. In 1972, the
Alaska State Legislature p****ed legislation...
- The
Eskaleut (/ɛˈskæliuːt/ e-SKAL-ee-oot), Eskimo–Aleut or Inuit–
Yupik–Unangan
languages are a
language family native to the
northern portions of the...
-
Yupik (also
known as
Siberian Yupik,
Bering Strait Yupik[citation needed], Yuit[citation needed], Yoit[citation needed], "St.
Lawrence Island Yupik"...
-
Creoles (Russian: Креолы, romanized: Kreoly), who inter-married with Aleut,
Yupik, Eskimo, and
other Alaskan Native peoples. In
Russian Alaska, the term Creole...