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In this study of the Navajo language, Professor Robert W. Young
tackled what strikes both the learner and the native speaker as an
insurmountable obstacleathat Navajo appears to be a verb-centered
language in which all the verbs are "irregular." In "The Navajo
Verb System" Professor Young reveals both its structure and its
inflection as entirely "regular" and based on definite rules of
order.
A leading authority on Navajo verb morphology, Young brought
over sixty years of experience to this study. This volume, which
Young called a handbook, not only details the features of verb
structure and inflection but also reflects the grammatical
processes that generate a wealth of concrete lexical derivatives
from a relatively small number of abstract verbal roots.
This volume, together with Professor Young's earlier books, is a
basic reference invaluable to advanced students, linguists, and
native speakers of Navajo.
"This fine study presents great sweeps of Navajo verbal
structure essentially at a glance. . . . The various sets of
morphologically homologous verb themes are set out by Mode category
and 'conjugation' so that all the elements that go to make up
individual forms can be seen at a glance."aProfessor Kenneth Hale,
MIT
This outstanding presentation of the fundamentals of
multidimensional scaling illustrates the applicability of MDS to a
wide variety of disciplines. The first two sections provide ground
work in the history and theory of MDS. The final section applies
MDS techniques to such diverse fields as physics, marketing, and
political science.
More than 50% of America's schools today exist in rural settings.
This book addresses the distinctiveness of rural school leaders,
identifies issues encountered by administrators, faculty, and
students, and concludes by proposing new standards for rural
schools in general and their leaders. This book will be of special
interest to everyone involved in the operation of a rural school
district.
This outstanding presentation of the fundamentals of
multidimensional scaling illustrates the applicability of MDS to a
wide variety of disciplines. The first two sections provide ground
work in the history and theory of MDS. The final section applies
MDS techniques to such diverse fields as physics, marketing, and
political science.
Sandstones form the backdrop to some of the world's most
spectacular scenery, and are found all over the planet and in all
climates. Following on from the authors' successful 1992 book, this
is the only volume that considers sandstone landforms from a truly
global perspective. It describes the wide variety of landforms that
are found in sandstone, and discusses the role of lithological
variation, chemical weathering and erosional processes in creating
these features, with examples drawn from around the world. Climatic
and tectonic constraints on the development of sandstone landscapes
are also considered. This volume provides a comprehensive
assessment of the literature from publications in a range of
languages, and is illustrated with over 130 photographs of
sandstone features from every continent. It presents a holistic
account of sandstone terrain for researchers and graduate students
in a variety of fields including geography, geomorphology,
sedimentology and geomechanics.
First published in 1980, this volume is the definitive dictionary
and linguistic analysis of the Navajo language. In this revised
edition, the entire grammatical section has been rewritten to
include a wide range of linguistic information that will establish
a foundation for future work in Navajo.
" Robert Young and William Morgan] have made it possible to
educate, communicate, inform, and entertain through the written
Navajo language."--Navajo Tribal Council
" "The Navajo Language"] is a unique contribution to American
Indian linguistics and lexicography. It is] a reference work of the
highest quality, a book that is a rich resource for Navajo
speakers, people learning to speak Navajo, and scholars interested
in Navajo and Athabaskan linguistics."--"International Journal of
American Linguistics"
The selected articles were published in Navajo in a monthly
newspaper: Adahooni igii. The newspaper was printed on a single
folded sheet of newsprint and distributed from 1943 to 1957
throughout the Reservation and was a predecessor of the
contemporary Navajo Times. Adahooni igii was published by the
Navajo Agency of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Window Rock,
Arizona and contributed to the standardization of Navajo
orthography. The only widely available texts intended for a Navajo
audience up to that point had been religious publications and parts
of Diyin God Bizaad - the Bible. The paper was edited by Robert W.
Young and William Morgan, Sr. whose task it was to create a
simplified Navajo alphabet with Roman letters found on an English
typewriter keyboard. They write in the introduction: "We have
endeavored to select the best of these historical accounts, to
publish them bilingually in the present volume, and it is our hope
that they may be of interest to all persons and students of Navajo
history." We find stories about the traditional Navajo
country-about the Four Sacred Mountains and how the clans were
created, as well as a story about Navajo scouts on the trail of
Geronimo. Articles about the livestock reduction period and the
resulting economic and social disaster and the long range 10 year
rehabilitation program after World War II are also included.
This is a new release of the original 1949 edition.
Son of Former Many Beads begins his narration by telling us that
his parents had been rounded up by Kit Carson's troops, were driven
to Fort Sumner during the Long Walk period and managed to escape
from imprisonment to live with the Chiricahua Apaches. He was born
among the Chiricahua two years later, and returned with his family
to their homeland after the tribe had been released from internment
at Fort Sumner. His father, Many Beads eventually moved back to the
Ramah area with his family, where they once had lived. His
narration spans the time before first contact with the white man,
to the thirties of last century, relating the struggle for survival
against intruding Mormons, the railroad company and the US
government. This interview was recorded in 1930 and written in the
Navajo language in 1954 by linguists, Young and Morgan. The English
translation follows the original Navajo text sentence by sentence.
We gain insight into the difficulties his people encounter to
regain the status as rightful residents on their own land. Native
Child Dinetah is reprinting and creating new editions of historical
writings to help preserve and continue Navajo culture, language,
and history. This book is a hand-scanned facsimile reprint of the
original. When necessary, individual pages have been improved and
enhanced for readability. Each book is true to the original work.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
Sandstones form the backdrop to some of the world's most
spectacular scenery, and are found all over the planet and in all
climates. Following on from the authors' successful 1992 book, this
is the only volume that considers sandstone landforms from a truly
global perspective. It describes the wide variety of landforms that
are found in sandstone, and discusses the role of lithological
variation, chemical weathering and erosional processes in creating
these features, with examples drawn from around the world. Climatic
and tectonic constraints on the development of sandstone landscapes
are also considered. This volume provides a comprehensive
assessment of the literature from publications in a range of
languages, and is illustrated with over 130 photographs of
sandstone features from every continent. It presents a holistic
account of sandstone terrain for researchers and graduate students
in a variety of fields including geography, geomorphology,
sedimentology and geomechanics.
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Coyote Tales (Navajo, Paperback)
Robert W. Young; As told to William Morgan; Adapted by Hildegard Thompson
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R390
Discovery Miles 3 900
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The original Navajo Coyote Tales - beautifully colorized. For the
first time since the stories were published in 1949, children and
adults can read the tales of Coyote the Trickster again in Navajo
and English. This edition has been newly typeset in Navajo and
designed to closely resemble the original. It is not a facsimile
reprint, as sold by other publishers. Coyote stories were told by
Navajo elders when gathering around the fire place at night in
winter. It was the traditional way to educate young listeners. Six
of these delightful tales were originally collected in Navajo 75
years ago from older story tellers and translated into English.
Navajo artist Andrew Tsihnajinnie's illustrations accompany the
tales - we have enhanced these outstanding drawings by reproducing
the original black-and-white illustrations in color. Enjoy how
coyote is always trying to trick someone, but things rarely turn
out quite as he plans
In Navajo, verbs are the building blocks of meaning. By adding
prefixes to a verb root, one can often generate a complete thought.
This dictionary provides conjugations for almost sixty percent of
all Navajo verbs with English translations. It is arranged in
alphabetical order by the verb roots in Navajo and sample sentences
of each verb are included as separate listings.
"Alyse Goodluck Neundorf (1942-2004), teacher, linguist,
interpreter, artist, writer and a former 'Miss Navajo, ' was the
author of this work on the Navajo verb--the last of her
contributions in the field of Navajo linguistics. . . .
"The "[Navajo/English Dictionary of Verbs]" lists 350 Navajo
verbs in paradigm form, conjugated for the Imperfective,
Perfective, and Future modes. It was her intention that it be used
both by students of Navajo and teachers of the language."--from the
Foreword by Robert Young
Lawrence W. Towner, historian and head of one of the country's
largest independent research libraries, was also an eloquent
spokesman for the humanities. Throughout his career - first as a
historian and then as head of the Newberry Library - he developed
and expressed a coherent vision for the role of humanities
scholarship in American society, voicing the needs of scholars and
research institutions while searching for a balance between the
scholar's freedom of research and his or her social responsibility.
While at the Newberry Library he built and focused its prestigious
collections, in his words "an uncommon collection of uncommon
collections". He pioneered in the preservation of books and
manuscripts, and created major research centers, establishing the
library as a community of scholars with a broad outreach to a
variety of publics. He established research centers for
cartography, Renaissance Studies, the history of the American
Indian, and family and community history; the last two reflected
his longstanding interest in utilizing underused library resources
to develop neglected aspects of history. The essays and talks
gathered in Past Imperfect cover a broad range of topics of
continuing relevance to the humanities and to scholarship in
general. Part I collects Towner's historical essays on the
indentured servants, apprentices, and slaves of colonial New
England that are standards of the "new social history". The pieces
in Part II express his vision of the library as an institution for
research and education; here he discusses the rationale for the
creation of research centers, the Newberry's pioneering policies
for conservation and preservation, and the ways in which
collectionswere built. In Part III Towner writes revealingly of his
co-workers and mentors. Part IV assembles his statements as
"spokesman for the humanities", addressing questions of national
priorities in funding, and of so-called elitist scholarship versus
public programs. These essays, talks, internal memoranda, and
letters capture "Bill" Towner's personality and span the wide range
of his experience and expertise. Expressing Towner's coherent
vision of the place of humanities, libraries, and scholarship in
American life, Past Imperfect will be of interest to anyone
concerned about the future of the humanities in modern society.
This volume emphasizes the application of modern biotechnological
approaches to the study and control of animal parasites. The book
begins by discussing molecular concepts and principles in general
before moving on to cover specific applications for endoparasites,
ectoparasites, and finally the hosts themselves. Animal Parasite
Control Utilizing Biotechnology will be an instrumental reference
in promoting a better understanding of the host-parasite
relationship and suggesting viable means of controlling
economically important parasite infections of animals. The book
will be invaluable to zoologists, parasitologists, microbiologists,
biochemists, geneticists, immunologists, physiologists, molecular
biologists, veterinarian and medical scientists, and advanced
students interested in the topic.
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Discovery Miles 7 940
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