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Compiled by author John Enrico,
the Haida Dictionary is the
most complete record ever published of the language.
The dictionary, published in 2005 by SHI and the Alaska Native
Language Center, is considered to be a master work and a major
contribution to the field of Haida linguistics.
The two-volume
set provides full coverage
of the vocabulary,
including variant forms, word class, and examples of usage, all by
dialect; also there are explanations of word history and derivation. A
series of appendices offers detailed information on phonology, semantics
of verbs, meanings of classifiers, numbers, and kin terms. An
English-to-Haida index with about 7,000 items gives the dictionary user
a ready tool for finding specific Haida words with reference to the full
dictionary entries.
Haida is spoken in two
major dialects: southern at Skidegate and northern at Masset, both on
the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia. Northern Haida is also
spoken in the Alaskan communities of Hydaburg, Kasaan and
Ketchikan.
The Haida nation may
have numbered well over 10,000 at the time of first European contact in
1774. Today, of a total Haida population of about 2,200 in Canada and
Alaska, perhaps 40 fluent speakers of the language are still living.
Serious sustained
study of Haida began in the 1880s with Anglican missionary publications,
mostly translations of religious material. Prominent linguists Franz
Boas, John Swanton, Edward Sapir, and Emile Benveniste added
significantly to the body of scholarship on the language. Assertions by
some linguists that Haida is part of the same language family as
Athabascan-Eyak and Tlingit remains a source of controversy among
language experts.
The modern period of
Haida linguistics began in 1972, including the work of Jeff Leer with
Erma Lawrence. John Enrico arrived in the Queen Charlottes in 1975 and
immediately immersed himself in the language, living in the household of
Masset matriarch Florence Davidson. His published documentation of the
language includes works on phonology, syntax, and songs, and now finally
this truly monumental dictionary.
The Haida Dictionary is a master reference from which academic
linguists may further examine the relationship of Haida to other
language families and educators may develop teaching materials for
classrooms at every level.
Noted linguist Michael
Krauss concluded in his foreword for the book that even though this
dictionary by itself cannot keep Haida alive as a spoken language, “we
can all now breathe a sigh of relief and gratitude to John Enrico that
he has provided Haida with the best record that any Native American
language can have for future generations.”
The book cover
features art by Haida artist Robert Davidson, who was born in Hydaburg
and is an internationally renowned Native artist.
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Haida
Dictionary
$279.00 (2-volume set)
Place Order Now!

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