DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» East Cree
East Cree
Master of Arts
Of the University of Manitoba in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Àrts
Aboriginal Languages in Canada
Supplementary Resources 2 Connect
MOT Proceedings Paper-Current
When Is a Cluster Not a Cluster?: a Northern East Cree Case Study
Innu-Aimun) in Labrador1
Evidence from Phonological and Morphological Development in Northern East Cree
Indigenous Languages in Canada
Moose (L-Dialect) and Swampy (N-Dialect) Cree Conversation Manual
Towards a Dialectology of Cree-Montagnais-Naskapi
East Cree Material Culture Together We Survive
Comparative Structures of East Cree and English
The First Language Acquisition of Nominal Inflection in Northern East Cree: Possessives and Nouns
In Iiyiyiuyimuwin (Eastern James Bay Cree)
Morphological Variation in Cree Inflection*
Chapter 2: Consonants
Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics Range: 1400–167F
Top View
Dyck, Carrie, Marie-Odile Junker, and Kelly Logan. 2010
Net Charms in Cree and Ojibwe Language, Culture, and Worldview
Negative Markers in East Cree and M Ontagnais
Translating English Into Cree: Not Just Lip Service
Northern East Cree Accent*
The Process of Spelling Standardization of Innu-Aimun (Montagnais)1 Anne-Marie Baraby
East Cree Ghost Participants
The Online Terminology Forum for East Cree and Innu: a Collaborative Approach to Multi-Format Terminology Development
The Case of East Cree Verb Inflection
East Cree Online Lessons User and Pedagogical Guide
Applied Computer Technology in Cree and Naskapi Language Programs
Learning Northern East Cree
Casyltex: Macros for Cree/Inuktitut Version 2.00
Chapter 1: Plains Cree, Grammar, and Cree Grammar
Focus, Obviation, and Word Order in East Cree
Mapping Dialectal Variation Using the Algonquian Linguistic Atlas
Towards a Renewed Understanding of Cree-Innu-Naskapi Dialectology
On the Acquisition of Segments and Syllable Types: a Case Study of a First-Language Learner of Northern East Cree