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{{Dablink|This article is about the indigenous peoples of Arctic and Sub-Arctic. For other indigenous peoples see [[Indigenous peoples (disambiguation)]]}}
'''Eskimo''' is a slang word for teenage druglord from Malasia. These people are sexually attracted to spinny hats so most eskimos wear them.
{{Otheruses}}
{{globalize}}
[[File:Кожаный панцирь.jpg|thumb|[[Lamellar armour|Lamellar armor]] of hardened leather reinforced by wood and bones worn by [[native siberians]] and '''Eskimo''']]
'''Eskimos''' or '''Esquimaux''' are [[indigenous peoples]] who have traditionally inhabited the circumpolar region from eastern [[Siberia]] ([[Russia]]), across [[Alaska]] ([[United States]]) and [[Canada]], and all of [[Greenland]].

There are two main groups referred to as Eskimo: [[Yupik]] and [[Inuit]]. A third group, the [[Aleut]], is related. The ''Yupik'' language dialects and cultures in Alaska and eastern Siberia have evolved in place beginning with the original ([[Dorset culture|pre-Dorset]]) Eskimo culture that developed in Alaska. Approximately 4,000 years ago the ''Unangam'' (also known as Aleut) culture became distinctly separate, and evolved into a non-Eskimo culture. Approximately 1,500-2,000 years ago, apparently in Northwestern Alaska, two other distinct variations appeared. The Inuit language branch became distinct and in only several hundred years spread across northern Alaska, Canada and into Greenland. At about the same time, the Thule Technology also developed in northwestern Alaska and very quickly spread over the entire area occupied by Eskimo people, though it was not necessarily adopted by all of them.
{{Indigenous Peoples of Canada}}
The earliest known Eskimo cultures were Pre-Dorset Technology, which appear to have been a fully developed Eskimo culture that dates to 5,000 years ago. They appear to have evolved in Alaska from people using the Archaic Small Tools Technology, who probably had migrated to Alaska from Siberia at least 2 to 3 thousand years earlier; though they might have been in Alaska as far back as 10 to 12 thousand years or more. There are similar artifacts found in Siberia going back to perhaps 18,000 years ago.

Today the two main groups of Eskimos are the Inuit of northern Alaska, Canada and Greenland, and the Yupik, comprising speakers of four distinct [[Yupik languages]] and originating in western Alaska, in [[South Central Alaska]] along the [[Gulf of Alaska]] coast, and in the [[Russian Far East]].

In Alaska, the term Eskimo is commonly used, because it includes both ''[[Yupik]]'' and ''[[Inupiat]]'', while [[Inuit]] is not accepted as a collective term or even specifically used for ''Inupiat''. No universal replacement term for Eskimo, inclusive of all Inuit and Yupik people, is accepted across the geographical area inhabited by the Inuit and Yupik peoples.<ref name="kaplan"/> In Canada and Greenland, the term ''Eskimo'' has fallen out of favour, as it is considered [[pejorative]] by the natives and has been replaced by the term ''Inuit''. The [[Constitution Act, 1982|Canadian Constitution Act of 1982]], [[Section Twenty-five of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms|sections 25]] and [[Section Thirty-five of the Constitution Act, 1982|35]] recognized the '''Inuit''' as a distinctive group of [[aboriginal peoples in Canada|Canadian aboriginals]].<ref name="defe">{{cite web |url=http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/const/annex_e.html#II |title=Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms |work=Department of Justice Canada }}</ref>

==Languages==
{{Main|Eskimo-Aleut languages}}
The [[Eskimo-Aleut languages|Eskimo-Aleut]] family of languages includes two cognate branches: the [[Aleut language|Aleut]] (Unangam) branch and the Eskimo branch. The Eskimo sub-family consists of the [[Inuit language]] and Yupik language sub-groups.<ref name="FortecueM"> {{Cite journal | title = "Comparative Eskimo Dictionary with Aleut Cognates" | coauthors = Michael Fortescue, Steven Jacobson, and Lawance Kaplan | publisher = [[Alaska Native Language Center]], [[University of Alaska Fairbanks]]}}</ref> The [[Sireniki Eskimo language|Sirenikski language]], which is virtually extinct, is sometimes regarded as a third branch of the Eskimo language family, but other sources regard it as a group belonging to the Yupik branch.<ref name="FortecueM"/><ref name="kaplanB">Kaplan, Lawrence. (2001-12-10). [http://www.uaf.edu/anlc/yupik_inuit.html "Comparative Yupik and Inuit"]. [[Alaska Native Language Center]], [[University of Alaska Fairbanks]]. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.</ref>

Inuit languages comprise a [[dialect continuum]], or dialect chain, that stretches from [[Unalakleet, Alaska|Unalakleet]] and [[Norton Sound]] in Alaska, across northern Alaska and Canada, and east all the way to Greenland. Speakers of two adjacent Inuit dialects can easily understand one another, but speakers of dialects at the extreme distant ends of the range have significant difficulty. [[Seward Peninsula]] dialects in Western Alaska, where much of the [[Inupiat]] culture has only been in place for perhaps less than 500 years, are greatly affected by phonological influence from the Yupik languages. Eastern Greenlandic, at the opposite end of the Inuit range has had significant word replacement due to a unique form of ritual name avoidance.<ref name="FortecueM"/><ref name="kaplanB"/>

The four Yupik languages have existed in place, which probably includes the locations where Eskimo culture and language began, for much longer than the Inuit language. [[Alutiiq language|Alutiiq]] (Sugpiaq), [[Central Alaskan Yup'ik language|Central Alaskan Yup'ik]], [[Naukan language|Naukan]] (Naukanski), and [[Siberian Yupik language|Siberian Yupik]], are distinct languages with limited mutual intelligibility.<ref name="FortecueM"/> Even the dialectal differences within Alutiiq and Central Alaskan Yup'ik sometimes are relatively great for locations that are relatively close geographically.<ref name="kaplanB"/>

While grammatical structures of Yupik and Inuit languages are similar, they have pronounced differences phonologically and differences of vocabulary between Inuit and any of one of the Yupik languages is greater than between any two Yupik languages.<ref name="kaplanB"/>

==Nomenclature==
===Origin of the name Eskimo===
{{Repetition|date=October 2009}}
{{Wiktionary|eskimo|Eskimo}}
Two principal competing etymologies have been proposed for the name "Eskimo", but the most commonly accepted today appears to be the Montagnais word meaning "snowshoe-netter". The word ''assime·w'' means "she laces a snowshoe" in [[Montagnais]]. Since Montagnais speakers refer to the neighbouring [[Mi'kmaq]] people using words that sound very much like ''eskimo'', [[Ives Goddard]] of the [[Smithsonian Institution]] has concluded that this is the more likely origin of the word.<ref name="goddard">Goddard, Ives (1984). "Synonymy." In ''Arctic'', ed. David Damas. Vol. 5 of ''Handbook of North American Indians'', ed. William C. Sturtevant, pp. 5-7. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. Cited in Campbell 1997</ref><ref name="campbell">Campbell, Lyle (1997). ''American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America'', pg. 394. New York: Oxford University Press</ref>

Jose Mailhot, a Quebec anthropologist who speaks [[Montagnais language|Montagnais]], however, published a paper in 1978 which suggested that the meaning is "people who speak a different language".<ref name="mailhot">Mailhot, J. (1978). "L'étymologie de «Esquimau» revue et corrigée." ''Etudes Inuit/Inuit Studies'' 2-2:59-70.</ref>

Folklore has it that speakers of some [[Algonkian languages]] coined the term Eskimo to mean "eaters of raw meat". Linguistic research by anthropologists does not support that etymology, but regardless it is commonly felt in Canada and Greenland that the term ''Eskimo'' is pejorative.<ref name="kaplan">Kaplan, Lawrence. (2002). [http://www.uaf.edu/anlc/inuitoreskimo.html "Inuit or Eskimo: Which names to use?"]. [[Alaska Native Language Center]], [[University of Alaska Fairbanks]]. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.</ref><ref name="stern1">[http://books.google.com/books?id=3UHTsUmt1PEC&dq=isbn:0810850583 Historical Dictionary of the Inuit By Pamela R. Stern]</ref><ref name="bartleby">[http://www.bartleby.com/61/24/E0212400.html The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition]</ref><ref name="paga1">[http://wikitravel.org/en/Greenland wikitravel == Greenland]</ref><ref name="ostg1">[http://www.ostgroenland-hilfe.de/en/projekt.html Ostgroenland-Hilfe Project]</ref>

While the majority of academic linguists hold the non-pejorative view of Eskimo, the majority of [[Inuit]] people believe the word to be racist, and are similarly supported by Algonkian speakers who see the natural similarity in pronunciation to "he eats raw". While the term's proper etymology continues to be held to be neutral by linguists, Native and Métis groups both inside the Inuit and Cree/Ojibwa peoples insist that the term evolving as presented by linguists does not make sense. Many Native North American peoples used snowshoes, and as such would not likely choose to use their word for snowshoe to describe any other native people. Whatever the truth, the resulting political response to the perception of Eskimo being pejorative has been significant, with The Inuit Circumpolar Conference meeting in Barrow, Alaska, officially adopting Inuit as a designation for all Eskimos, regardless of their local usages, in 1977.

===General===
In Canada and Greenland<ref name="kaplan"/><ref name="stern1"/><ref name="ostg1"/><ref name="bartlebyinuit">usage note, [http://www.bartleby.com/61/10/I0211000.html Inuit], ''American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language'': Fourth Edition, 2000</ref> the term ''Eskimo'' is widely held to be [[pejorative]]<ref name="bartlebyinuit"/><ref name="natlang"/> and has fallen out of favour, largely supplanted by the term ''Inuit''. However, while ''Inuit'' describes all of the Eskimo peoples in Canada and Greenland, that is not true in Alaska and Siberia. In Alaska the term ''Eskimo'' is commonly used, because it includes both Yupik and Inupiat, while ''Inuit'' is not accepted as a collective term or even specifically used for ''Inupiat'' (which technically is ''Inuit''). No universal replacement term for ''Eskimo'', inclusive of all Inuit and Yupik people, is accepted across the geographical area inhabited by the Inuit and Yupik peoples.<ref name="kaplan"/>

The primary reason that ''Eskimo'' is considered derogatory is the arguable<ref name="mailhot">{{cite journal | last =Mailhot | first =Jose | title =L'etymologie de "esquimau" revuew et corrigee | journal =Etudes/Inuit/Studies | volume = 2 | issue =. 2 | date=1978}}</ref><ref name="aueo">[http://alt-usage-english.org/excerpts/fxeskimo.html "Eskimo" by Mark Israel]</ref><ref name="igoddard">{{cite book | last =Goddard | first =Ives | authorlink =Ives Goddard | title =Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 5 (Arctic) | publisher =[[Smithsonian Institution]] | date =1984 | isbn = 978-0160045806}}</ref><ref name="creeml">[http://www.nisto.com/cree/mail/cree-1997-11.txt Cree Mailing List Digest November 1997]</ref> perception that it means "eaters of raw meat."<ref name="natlang">[http://www.native-languages.org/iaq23.htm Setting the Record Straight About Native Languages: What Does "Eskimo" Mean In Cree?]</ref><ref name="bartlebyeskimo">[http://www.bartleby.com/61/24/E0212400.html Eskimo], ''American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language'': Fourth Edition, 2000</ref> There are two different etymologies in scientific literature for the term ''Eskimo''. The most well-known comes from [[Ives Goddard]] at the [[Smithsonian Institution]], who says it means "Snowshoe netters."<ref name="aueo"/> Quebec linguist Jose Mailhot, who speaks [[Innu-aimun]] (Montagnais) (which Mailhot and Goddard agree is the language from which the word originated), published a definitive study in 1978 stating that it means "people who speak a different language."<ref name="mailhot"/><ref name="creeml"/>

Since the 1970s in Canada and Greenland ''Eskimo'' has widely been considered offensive, owing to [[folklore]] and derogatory usage. In 1977 The Inuit Circumpolar Conference meeting in Barrow, Alaska, officially adopted Inuit as a designation for all circumpolar native peoples,
regardless of their local view on an appropriate term. As a result the Canadian government usage has replaced the (locally) defunct term Eskimo with ''Inuit'' (''Inuk'' in singular). The preferred term in Canada's Central Arctic is ''Inuinnaq'',<ref name=translate>{{cite book|last=Ohokak|first=G.|coauthors=M. Kadlun, B. Harnum|title=Inuinnaqtun-English Dictionary|publisher=Kitikmeot Heritage Society}}</ref> and in the eastern Canadian Arctic ''Inuit''. The language is often called ''Inuktitut'', though other local designations are also used.

The Inuit of Greenland refer to themselves as ''Greenlanders'' or, in their own language, ''Kalaallit'', and to their language as ''Greenlandic'' or ''Kalaallisut''.<ref name="kaplan"/>

Because of the linguistic, ethnic, and cultural differences between Yupik and Inuit peoples there is uncertainty as to the acceptance of any term encompassing all Yupik and Inuit people. There has been some movement to use ''Inuit'', and the [[Inuit Circumpolar Council]], representing a circumpolar population of 150,000 Inuit and Yupik people of Greenland, Canada, Alaska, and Siberia, in its charter defines ''Inuit'' for use within the ICC as including "the Inupiat, Yupik (Alaska), Inuit, [[Inuvialuit]] (Canada), [[Kalaallit]] (Greenland) and Yupik (Russia)."<ref name="ICCcharter">Inuit Circumpolar Council. (2006). [http://inuitcircumpolar.com/index.php?auto_slide=&ID=374&Lang=En&Parent_ID=&current_slide_num= "Charter."] Retrieved on 2007-04-06.</ref> However, even the Inuit people in Alaska refer themselves as Inupiat (the language is Inupiaq) and do not typically use the term Inuit. Thus, in Alaska, ''Eskimo'' is in common usage, and is the preferred term when speaking collectively of all Inupiat and Yupik people, or of all Inuit and Yupik people of the world.<ref name="kaplan"/>

Alaskans also use the term [[Alaska Natives|Alaska Native]], which is inclusive of all Eskimo, Aleut and [[Native Americans in the United States|Indian]] people of Alaska, and is exclusive of Inuit or Yupik people originating outside the state. The term ''Alaska Native'' has important legal usage in Alaska and the rest of the United States as a result of the [[Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act]] of 1971.

The term "Eskimo" is also used world wide in linguistic or ethnographic works to denote the larger branch of Eskimo-Aleut languages, the smaller branch being Aleut.

==Inuit==
{{Main|Inuit}}
{{See also|List of Inuit}}
[[Image:Eskimo Family NGM-v31-p564-2.jpg|thumb|An Inuit family, c.1917]]
The Inuit inhabit the [[Arctic]] and northern [[Bering Sea]] coasts of Alaska and Arctic coasts of the [[Northwest Territories]], [[Nunavut]], [[Quebec]], [[Labrador]], and Greenland. Until fairly recent times, there has been a remarkable homogeneity in the culture throughout this area, which traditionally relied on fish, sea mammals, and land animals for food, heat, light, clothing and tools. They maintain a unique [[Inuit culture]].

===Alaska's Inupiat===
{{Main|Inupiat}}
The Inupiat people are the Inuit people of Alaska's [[Northwest Arctic Borough, Alaska|Northwest Arctic]] and [[North Slope Borough, Alaska|North Slope]] boroughs and the [[Bering Strait]]s region, including the Seward Peninsula. [[Barrow, Alaska|Barrow]], the northernmost city in the United States, is in the Inupiaq region. Their language is known as [[Inupiaq language|Inupiaq]].

===Canada's Inuit===
{{Main|Inuit}}
Canadian Inuit live primarily in [[Nunavut]] (a [[territories of Canada|territory of Canada]]), [[Nunavik]] (the northern part of [[Quebec]]) and in [[Nunatsiavut]] (the Inuit settlement region in [[Labrador]]).

===Inuvialuit===
{{Main|Inuvialuit}}
The Inuvialuit live in the western [[Northern Canada|Canadian Arctic]] region. Their homeland - the [[Inuvialuit Settlement Region]] - covers the [[Arctic Ocean]] coastline area from the Alaskan border east to [[Amundsen Gulf]] and includes the western [[Canadian Arctic Archipelago|Canadian Arctic Islands]]. The land was demarked in 1984 by the [[Inuvialuit Final Agreement]].

===Kalaallit===
{{Main|Kalaallit}}
The Kalaallit live in Greenland, which is called Kalaallit Nunaat in [[Greenlandic language|Kalaallisut]].

==Yupik==
{{Main| Yupik}}
The Yupik are indigenous or aboriginal peoples who live along the coast of western Alaska, especially on the [[Yukon River|Yukon]]-[[Kuskokwim River|Kuskokwim]] delta and along the Kuskokwim River ([[Yup'ik|Central Alaskan Yup'ik]]), in southern Alaska (the [[Alutiiq]]) and along the eastern coast of [[Chukchi Peninsula|Chukotka]] in the Russian Far East and [[St. Lawrence Island]] in western Alaska (the [[Siberian Yupik]]). The Yupik economy has traditionally been strongly dominated by the harvest of [[marine mammal]]s, especially [[Pinniped|seals]], [[walrus]], and [[whale]]s.<ref>Yupik. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved January 13, 2008, from: [http://www.search.eb.com.offcampus.lib.washington.edu/eb/article-9078135 Encyclopædia Britannica Online]</ref>

===Alutiiq===
{{Main|Alutiiq}}
The Alutiiq also called ''Pacific Yupik'' or ''Sugpiaq'', are a southern, coastal branch of Yupik. They are not to be confused with the Aleuts, who live further to the southwest, including along the [[Aleutian Islands]]. They traditionally lived a coastal lifestyle, subsisting primarily on ocean resources such as [[salmon]], [[halibut]], and whales, as well as rich land resources such as berries and land mammals. Alutiiq people today live in coastal fishing communities, where they work in all aspects of the modern economy, while also maintaining the cultural value of subsistence. The Alutiiq language is relatively close to that spoken by the Yupik in the [[Bethel, Alaska]] area, but is considered a distinct language with two major dialects: the Koniag dialect, spoken on the [[Alaska Peninsula]] and on [[Kodiak Island]], and the Chugach dialect, is spoken on the southern [[Kenai Peninsula]] and in [[Prince William Sound]]. Residents of [[Nanwalek, Alaska|Nanwalek]], located on southern part of the Kenai Peninsula near [[Seldovia, Alaska|Seldovia]], speak what they call Sugpiaq and are able to understand those who speak Yupik in Bethel. With a population of approximately 3,000, and the number of speakers in the mere hundreds, Alutiiq communities are currently in the process of revitalizing their language.

===Central Alaskan Yup'ik===
{{Main|Yup'ik}}
''Yup'ik'', with an apostrophe, denotes the speakers of the Central Alaskan Yup'ik language, who live in western Alaska and southwestern Alaska from southern Norton Sound to the north side of [[Bristol Bay]], on the [[Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta]], and on [[Nelson Island (Alaska)|Nelson Island]]. The use of the apostrophe in the name ''Yup'ik'' denotes a longer pronunciation of the ''p'' sound than found in Siberian Yupik. Of all the [[:Category:Indigenous languages of Alaska|Alaska Native languages]], Central Alaskan Yup'ik has the most speakers, with about 10,000 of a total Yup'ik population of 21,000 still speaking the language. There are five dialects of Central Alaskan Yup'ik, including General Central Yup'ik and the Egegik, Norton Sound, Hooper Bay-Chevak, Nunivak, dialects. In the latter two dialects, both the language and the people are called ''Cup'ik''.<ref name="centralyup'ik">Alaska Native Language Center. (2001-12-07). [http://www.uaf.edu/anlc/langs/cy.html "Central Alaskan Yup'ik."] [[Alaska Native Language Center]], [[University of Alaska Fairbanks]]. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.</ref>

===Siberian Yupik===
{{Main|Siberian Yupik}}
Siberian Yupik reside along the Bering Sea coast of the [[Chukchi Peninsula]] in Siberia in the Russian Far East<ref name="kaplanB"/> and in the villages of [[Gambell, Alaska|Gambell]] and [[Savoonga, Alaska|Savoonga]] on St. Lawrence Island in Alaska.<ref name="siberianyupik">Alaska Native Language Center. (2001-12-07). [http://www.uaf.edu/anlc/langs/sy.html "Siberian Yupik."] [[Alaska Native Language Center]], [[University of Alaska Fairbanks]]. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.</ref> The Central Siberian Yupik spoken on the Chukchi Peninsula and on St. Lawrence Island is nearly identical. About 1,050 of a total Alaska population of 1,100 Siberian Yupik people in Alaska still speak the language, and it is still the first language of the home for most St. Lawrence Island children. In Siberia, about 300 of a total of 900 Siberian Yupik people still learn and study the language, though it is no longer learned as a first language by children.<ref name="siberianyupik"/>

===Naukan===
{{Main|Naukan language}}
About 70 of 400 Naukan people still speak the Naukanski. The Naukan originate on the Chukot Peninsula in [[Chukotka Autonomous Okrug]] in Siberia.<ref name="kaplanB"/>

==Sireniki Eskimos==
{{Main|Sireniki Eskimos}}
Some speakers of Siberian Yupik languages used to speak an Eskimo variant in the past, before they underwent a [[language shift]]. These former speakers of Sireniki Eskimo language inhabited settlements Sireniki, <!--This is the correct spelling as per the source. Please don't use AWB to change it. Thanks.-->Imtuk, and some small villages stretching to the west from Sireniki along south-eastern coasts of Chukchi Peninsula,<ref name=VES>[http://www.siberian-studies.org/publications/PDF/bevakhtin.pdf Vakhtin 1998]: 162</ref> they lived in neighborhood with Siberian Yupik and [[Chukchi people]]s. As early as in 1895, <!--This is the correct spelling as per the source. Please don't use AWB to change it. Thanks.-->Imtuk was already a settlement with mixed population, Sireniki Eskimos and Ungazigmit<ref>Меновщиков 1964: 7</ref> (the latter belonging to Siberian Yupik). Sireniki Eskimo culture has been influenced by that of Chukchi (witnessed also by folktale [[Motif (narrative)|motifs]]<ref name=rein-rape>Меновщиков 1964: 132</ref>), also the language shows [[Chukchi language]] influences.<ref name=linfranc>[http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0008/000861/086162e.pdf Menovshchikov 1990]: 70</ref>

The above mentioned peculiarities of this (already [[Extinct language|extinct]]) Eskimo language amounted to mutual unintelligibility even with its nearest language relatives:<ref>Меновщиков 1964: 6–7</ref> in the past, Sireniki Eskimos even had to use the unrelated Chukchi language as a [[lingua franca]] for communicating with Siberian Yupik.<ref name=linfranc/>

Many words are formed from entirely different [[Root (linguistics)|root]]s than in Siberian Yupik,<ref name=diff-root>Меновщиков 1964: 42</ref> but even the grammar has several peculiarities not only among Eskimo languages, but even compared to Aleut. For example, [[Dual (grammatical number)|dual number]] is not known in Sireniki Eskimo, while most [[Eskimo-Aleut languages]] have dual,<ref name=only2>Меновщиков 1964: 38</ref> including its neighboring Siberian Yupik relatives.<ref name=verb2>Меновщиков 1964: 81</ref>

Little is known about the origin of this diversity. According to a supposition, the peculiarities of this language may be the result of a supposed long isolation from other Eskimo groups,<ref>Меновщиков 1962: 11</ref><ref>Меновщиков 1964: 9</ref> being in contact only with speakers of unrelated languages for many centuries. Influence by Chukchi language is clear.<ref name=linfranc/>

Because of all these, the mere classification of Sireniki Eskimo language is not settled yet:<ref name=VE3>[http://www.siberian-studies.org/publications/PDF/bevakhtin.pdf Vakhtin 1998]: 161</ref> Sireniki language is sometimes regarded as a third branch of Eskimo (at least, its possibility is mentioned),<ref name="VE3"/><ref name=Vakh-Sir>Linguist List's description about [http://linguistlist.org/people/personal/get-personal-page2.cfm?PersonID=5548&RequestTimeout=500 Nikolai Vakhtin]'s book: [http://linguistlist.org/pubs/books/get-book.cfm?BookID=938 ''The Old Sirinek Language: Texts, Lexicon, Grammatical Notes'']. The author's untransliterated (original) name is “[http://www.eu.spb.ru/univ/rector/index.htm Н.Б. Вахтин]”.</ref><ref name=icc-ch-lan>{{cite web |title=Языки эскимосов |work=ICC Chukotka |publisher=[[Inuit Circumpolar Council]] |language=Russian |url=http://www.icc.hotbox.ru/yaziki.htm}}</ref> but sometimes it is regarded rather as a group belonging to the [[Yupik languages|Yupik]] branch.<ref name=siryup>[http://www.ethnologue.com/show_family.asp?subid=91176 Ethnologue Report for Eskimo-Aleut]</ref><ref name=kapyup>[http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0008/000861/086162e.pdf Kaplan 1990]: 136</ref>

==Dialects==
{{Main|Eskimo-Aleut languages}}
Inuit languages comprise a dialect continuum, or dialect chain, that stretches from [[Unalaska, Alaska|Unalaska]] and Norton Sound in Alaska, across northern Alaska and Canada, and east all the way to Greenland. Changes from western (Inupiaq) to eastern dialects are marked by the dropping of vestigial Yupik-related features, increasing consonant assimilation (e.g., ''kumlu'', meaning "thumb," changes to ''kuvlu'', changes to ''kublu'',<ref name=livingdict/> changes to ''kulluk'',<ref name=livingdict/> changes to ''kulluq''<ref name=livingdict>{{cite web|url=http://www.livingdictionary.com/search/viewResults.jsp?language=en&searchString=thumb&languageSet=all |title=thumb|work=Asuilaak Living Dictionary|accessdate=2007-11-25}}</ref>), and increased consonant lengthening, and lexical change. Thus, speakers of two adjacent Inuit dialects would usually be able to understand one another, but speakers from dialects distant from each other on the dialect continuum would have difficulty understanding one another.<ref name="kaplanB"/>

The four Yupik languages, including Alutiiq (Sugpiaq), Central Alaskan Yup'ik, Naukan (Naukanski), and Siberian Yupik are distinct languages with phonological, morphological, and lexical differences, and demonstrating limited mutual intelligibility. Additionally, both Alutiiq Central Yup'ik have considerable dialect diversity. The northernmost Yupik languages — Siberian Yupik and Naukanski Yupik — are linguistically only slightly closer to Inuit than is Alutiiq, which is the southernmost of the Yupik languages. Although the grammatical structures of Yupik and Inuit languages are similar, they have pronounced differences phonologically, and differences of vocabulary between Inuit and any of one of the Yupik languages is greater than between any two Yupik languages.<ref name="kaplanB"/>

The Sirenikski language is sometimes regarded as a third branch of the Eskimo language family, but other sources regard it as a group belonging to the Yupik branch.<ref name="kaplanB"/>

An overview of the '''Eskimo-Aleut''' languages family is given below:
:'''Aleut'''
::[[Aleut language]]
:::Western-Central dialects: Atkan, Attuan, Unangan, Bering (60-80 speakers)
:::Eastern dialect: Unalaskan, Pribilof (400 speakers)
:'''Eskimo''' (Yup'ik, Yuit, and Inuit)
::[[Yupik languages|Yupik]]
:::[[Central Alaskan Yup'ik language|Central Alaskan Yup'ik]] (10,000 speakers)
:::[[Alutiiq]] or Pacific Gulf Yup'ik (400 speakers)
:::[[Siberian Yupik language|Central Siberian Yupik]] or Yuit (Chaplinon and St Lawrence Island, 1400 speakers)
:::[[Naukan language|Naukan]] (70 speakers)
:::[[Inuit language|Inuit]] or Inupik (75,000 speakers)
::::[[Inupiaq language|Iñupiaq]] (northern Alaska, 3,500 speakers)
::::[[Inuvialuktun]] (western Canada; together with [[Siglitun]], Natsilingmiutut, [[Inuinnaqtun]] and [[Uummarmiutun]] 765 speakers)
::::[[Inuktitut]] (eastern Canada; together with [[Inuktun]] and [[Inuinnaqtun]], 30,000 speakers)
::::[[Greenlandic language|Kalaallisut]] (Greenland, 47,000 speakers)
:'''[[Sireniki Eskimo language]] (Sirenikskiy)''' (extinct)

==See also==
{{Div col|cols=2}}
* [[Athabaskan languages]]
* [[Canadian Eskimo Dog]]
* [[Eskimo kinship]]
* [[Eskimo words for snow]]
* [[Indigenous peoples (disambiguation)]]
* [[Inuit mythology]]
* [[Paleo-Eskimo]]
* [[Saqqaq culture]]
* [[Shamanism among Eskimo peoples]]

{{Div col end}}

==Notes==
{{reflist}}

==References==
* {{cite book |last=Kaplan |first=Lawrence D. |chapter=The Language of the Alaskan Inuit |pages=131–158 |editor=Dirmid R. F. Collis |title=Arctic Languages. An Awakening |publisher=UNESCO |location=Vendôme |year=1990 |isbn=92-3-102661-5 |chapterurl=http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0008/000861/086162e.pdf |format=pdf}}
* {{cite book |last=Menovshchikov |first=Georgy (= Г. А. Меновщиков) |chapter=Contemporary Studies of the Eskimo-Aleut Languages and Dialects: A Progress Report |pages=69–76 |editor=Dirmid R. F. Collis |title=Arctic Languages. An Awakening |publisher=UNESCO |location=Vendôme |year=1990 |isbn=92-3-102661-5 |chapterurl=http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0008/000861/086162e.pdf |format=pdf}}
* {{cite book |last=Vakhtin |first=Nikolai |chapter=Endangered Languages in Northeast Siberia: Siberian Yupik and other Languages of Chukotka |pages=159–173 |editor=Erich Kasten |title=Bicultural Education in the North: Ways of Preserving and Enhancing Indigenous Peoples’ Languages and Traditional Knowledge |publisher=Waxmann Verlag |location=Münster |year=1998 |isbn=978-3-89325-651-8 |chapterurl=http://www.siberian-studies.org/publications/PDF/bevakhtin.pdf |format=pdf |url=http://waxmann.com/index2.html?kat/651.html}}

===Cyrillic===
* {{cite book |last=Меновщиков |first=Г. А. |title=Язык сиреникских эскимосов. Фонетика, очерк морфологии, тексты и словарь |publisher=[[:ru:Российская академия наук|Академия Наук СССР]]. Институт языкознания |location=Москва • Ленинград, |year=1964}} The transliteration of author's name, and the rendering of title in English: {{cite book |last=Menovshchikov |first=G. A. |title=Language of Sireniki Eskimos. Phonetics, morphology, texts and vocabulary |publisher=[[Russian Academy of Sciences|Academy of Sciences of the USSR]] |location=Moscow • Leningrad |year=1964}}

==Further reading==
*[http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol5/iss2/art18/main.html Adapting to climate change: social-ecological resilience in a Canadian western arctic community. Conservation Ecology 5(2)]
*[http://www.ccl-cca.ca/NR/rdonlyres/03AC4F69-D0B8-4EA3-85B1-56C0AC2B158C/0/StateOfInuitLearning.pdf Canadian Council on Learning, State of Inuit Learning in Canada]
*[http://www.minpaku.ac.jp/staff/kishigami/040522.pdf Contemporary Food Sharing: A Case Study from Akulivik, PQ. Canada].
*[http://www.sacred-texts.com/nam/inu/index.htm Internet Sacred Text Archive: Inuit Religion]
*[http://anthropology.uwaterloo.ca/ArcticArchStuff/Inuit.html Inuit Culture]
*[http://www.ehponline.org/members/1993/101-7/1017009.PDF Inuit Exposure to Organochlorines through the Aquatic Food Chain. Environmental Health Perspectives 101(7)]
*[http://www.brandonu.ca/library/cjns/9.2/berlo.pdf Inuit Women and Graphic Arts: Female Creativity and Its Cultural Context. The Canadian Journal of Native Studies 9(2)]
*[http://www.pauktuutit.ca/pdf/publications/pauktuutit/InuitWay_e.pdf Pauktuuit Inuit Women of Canada, The Inuit Way: A Guide to Inuit Culture]
*[http://www.census.gov/prod/2006pubs/censr-28.pdf We the People: American Indians and Alaska Natives in the United States. Census 2000 Special Reports February 2006]

==External links==
{{external links}}
*[http://ankn.uaf.edu/index.html Alaska Native Knowledge Network]
*[http://www.alaskool.org/ Alaskool]
*[http://www.firstpeople.us American Indians: First People of America and Canada - Turtle Island]
*[http://www.anchoragemuseum.org/galleries/alaska_gallery/eskimo.aspx Anchorage Museum Association, Eskimo History and Culture]
*[http://arcticcircle.uconn.edu/index.html Arctic Circle]
*[http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link=/earth/polar/myths_arctic.html Arctic Cultures]
*[http://www.arctic.ucalgary.ca/index.php?page=arctic_contents Arctic Journal, Arctic Institute of North America]
*[http://www.mnh.si.edu/arctic/ Arctic Studies Center]
*[http://www.eki.ee/books/redbook/asiatic_eskimos.shtml The Asiatic (Siberian) Eskimos]
*[http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/loan_in/l/lance_with_a_blade_made_from_m.aspx The British Museum, Lance with a blade made from meteoric iron]
*[http://www.civilization.ca/cmc/exhibitions/tresors/ethno/index_e.shtml Canadian Museum of Civilization, Gateway to Aboriginal Heritage]
*[http://www.gamesmuseum.uwaterloo.ca/VirtualExhibits/Inuit/english Elliot Avedon Museum and Archive of Games, Inuit (Eskimo) Games]
*[http://www.beginband.com/akstudies/ Eskimo Music]
*[http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCESubjects&Params=A1 Historica Foundation of Canada, The Canadian Encyclopedia]
*[http://www.iowasource.com/travel/inuit_0308.html Inuit Culture in Transition: From the Arctic to Timbuktu. The Iowa Source March 2008]
*[http://www.itk.ca Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami: 5000 years of Inuit History and Heritage]
*[http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/quebechistory/encyclopedia/index.htm Quebec History Encyclopedia]
*[http://www.nfb.ca/enclasse/doclens/visau/index.php?mode=home&language=english National Film Board of Canada, Aboriginal Perspectives]
*[http://www.heritage.nf.ca/home.html Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage]
*[http://www.nunavut.com/nunavut99/english/index.html Nunavut '99: Changing the Map of Canada]
*[http://www.inuitmyths.com/index.htm Nunavut Bilingual Education Society (NBES), Inuit Myths and Legends]
*[http://www.archimuse.com/mw2005/papers/greenhorn/greenhorn.html Project naming: Always on our minds]

'''''Origin of the name'''''
*[http://linguistlist.org/issues/7/7-300.html The Linguist Mailing List, Sum: Ethnocentrism]
*[http://www.nisto.com/cree/mail/cree-1997-11.txt Cree Mailing List Digest, November 1997]
*[http://alt-usage-english.org/excerpts/fxeskimo.html Origin of the word "Eskimo"]

{{Indigenous peoples by continent}}

[[Category:Aboriginal peoples in the Arctic]]
[[Category:Algonquian ethnonyms]]
[[Category:Eskimos| ]]
[[Category:Ethnic groups in Russia]]
[[Category:Hunter-gatherers]]
[[Category:Indigenous peoples of North America]]

[[ar:الإسكيمو]]
[[be:Эскімосы]]
[[bg:Ескимоси]]
[[ca:Esquimal]]
[[cs:Eskymáci]]
[[de:Eskimo]]
[[et:Eskimod]]
[[fa:اسکیمو]]
[[fy:Eskimo's]]
[[ko:에스키모]]
[[hi:एस्किमो]]
[[hr:Eskimi]]
[[id:Eskimo]]
[[is:Eskimói]]
[[it:Eschimese]]
[[ka:ესკიმოსები]]
[[hu:Eszkimók]]
[[mk:Ескими]]
[[nl:Eskimo's]]
[[ja:エスキモー]]
[[no:Eskimoer]]
[[nn:Eskimoar]]
[[pt:Esquimós]]
[[ro:Eschimoşi]]
[[ru:Эскимосы]]
[[sr:Ескими]]
[[fi:Eskimot]]
[[sv:Eskimå]]
[[zh:爱斯基摩人]]

Revision as of 07:18, 25 November 2009

Lamellar armor of hardened leather reinforced by wood and bones worn by native siberians and Eskimo

Eskimos or Esquimaux are indigenous peoples who have traditionally inhabited the circumpolar region from eastern Siberia (Russia), across Alaska (United States) and Canada, and all of Greenland.

There are two main groups referred to as Eskimo: Yupik and Inuit. A third group, the Aleut, is related. The Yupik language dialects and cultures in Alaska and eastern Siberia have evolved in place beginning with the original (pre-Dorset) Eskimo culture that developed in Alaska. Approximately 4,000 years ago the Unangam (also known as Aleut) culture became distinctly separate, and evolved into a non-Eskimo culture. Approximately 1,500-2,000 years ago, apparently in Northwestern Alaska, two other distinct variations appeared. The Inuit language branch became distinct and in only several hundred years spread across northern Alaska, Canada and into Greenland. At about the same time, the Thule Technology also developed in northwestern Alaska and very quickly spread over the entire area occupied by Eskimo people, though it was not necessarily adopted by all of them.

The earliest known Eskimo cultures were Pre-Dorset Technology, which appear to have been a fully developed Eskimo culture that dates to 5,000 years ago. They appear to have evolved in Alaska from people using the Archaic Small Tools Technology, who probably had migrated to Alaska from Siberia at least 2 to 3 thousand years earlier; though they might have been in Alaska as far back as 10 to 12 thousand years or more. There are similar artifacts found in Siberia going back to perhaps 18,000 years ago.

Today the two main groups of Eskimos are the Inuit of northern Alaska, Canada and Greenland, and the Yupik, comprising speakers of four distinct Yupik languages and originating in western Alaska, in South Central Alaska along the Gulf of Alaska coast, and in the Russian Far East.

In Alaska, the term Eskimo is commonly used, because it includes both Yupik and Inupiat, while Inuit is not accepted as a collective term or even specifically used for Inupiat. No universal replacement term for Eskimo, inclusive of all Inuit and Yupik people, is accepted across the geographical area inhabited by the Inuit and Yupik peoples.[1] In Canada and Greenland, the term Eskimo has fallen out of favour, as it is considered pejorative by the natives and has been replaced by the term Inuit. The Canadian Constitution Act of 1982, sections 25 and 35 recognized the Inuit as a distinctive group of Canadian aboriginals.[2]

Languages

The Eskimo-Aleut family of languages includes two cognate branches: the Aleut (Unangam) branch and the Eskimo branch. The Eskimo sub-family consists of the Inuit language and Yupik language sub-groups.[3] The Sirenikski language, which is virtually extinct, is sometimes regarded as a third branch of the Eskimo language family, but other sources regard it as a group belonging to the Yupik branch.[3][4]

Inuit languages comprise a dialect continuum, or dialect chain, that stretches from Unalakleet and Norton Sound in Alaska, across northern Alaska and Canada, and east all the way to Greenland. Speakers of two adjacent Inuit dialects can easily understand one another, but speakers of dialects at the extreme distant ends of the range have significant difficulty. Seward Peninsula dialects in Western Alaska, where much of the Inupiat culture has only been in place for perhaps less than 500 years, are greatly affected by phonological influence from the Yupik languages. Eastern Greenlandic, at the opposite end of the Inuit range has had significant word replacement due to a unique form of ritual name avoidance.[3][4]

The four Yupik languages have existed in place, which probably includes the locations where Eskimo culture and language began, for much longer than the Inuit language. Alutiiq (Sugpiaq), Central Alaskan Yup'ik, Naukan (Naukanski), and Siberian Yupik, are distinct languages with limited mutual intelligibility.[3] Even the dialectal differences within Alutiiq and Central Alaskan Yup'ik sometimes are relatively great for locations that are relatively close geographically.[4]

While grammatical structures of Yupik and Inuit languages are similar, they have pronounced differences phonologically and differences of vocabulary between Inuit and any of one of the Yupik languages is greater than between any two Yupik languages.[4]

Nomenclature

Origin of the name Eskimo

Two principal competing etymologies have been proposed for the name "Eskimo", but the most commonly accepted today appears to be the Montagnais word meaning "snowshoe-netter". The word assime·w means "she laces a snowshoe" in Montagnais. Since Montagnais speakers refer to the neighbouring Mi'kmaq people using words that sound very much like eskimo, Ives Goddard of the Smithsonian Institution has concluded that this is the more likely origin of the word.[5][6]

Jose Mailhot, a Quebec anthropologist who speaks Montagnais, however, published a paper in 1978 which suggested that the meaning is "people who speak a different language".[7]

Folklore has it that speakers of some Algonkian languages coined the term Eskimo to mean "eaters of raw meat". Linguistic research by anthropologists does not support that etymology, but regardless it is commonly felt in Canada and Greenland that the term Eskimo is pejorative.[1][8][9][10][11]

While the majority of academic linguists hold the non-pejorative view of Eskimo, the majority of Inuit people believe the word to be racist, and are similarly supported by Algonkian speakers who see the natural similarity in pronunciation to "he eats raw". While the term's proper etymology continues to be held to be neutral by linguists, Native and Métis groups both inside the Inuit and Cree/Ojibwa peoples insist that the term evolving as presented by linguists does not make sense. Many Native North American peoples used snowshoes, and as such would not likely choose to use their word for snowshoe to describe any other native people. Whatever the truth, the resulting political response to the perception of Eskimo being pejorative has been significant, with The Inuit Circumpolar Conference meeting in Barrow, Alaska, officially adopting Inuit as a designation for all Eskimos, regardless of their local usages, in 1977.

General

In Canada and Greenland[1][8][11][12] the term Eskimo is widely held to be pejorative[12][13] and has fallen out of favour, largely supplanted by the term Inuit. However, while Inuit describes all of the Eskimo peoples in Canada and Greenland, that is not true in Alaska and Siberia. In Alaska the term Eskimo is commonly used, because it includes both Yupik and Inupiat, while Inuit is not accepted as a collective term or even specifically used for Inupiat (which technically is Inuit). No universal replacement term for Eskimo, inclusive of all Inuit and Yupik people, is accepted across the geographical area inhabited by the Inuit and Yupik peoples.[1]

The primary reason that Eskimo is considered derogatory is the arguable[7][14][15][16] perception that it means "eaters of raw meat."[13][17] There are two different etymologies in scientific literature for the term Eskimo. The most well-known comes from Ives Goddard at the Smithsonian Institution, who says it means "Snowshoe netters."[14] Quebec linguist Jose Mailhot, who speaks Innu-aimun (Montagnais) (which Mailhot and Goddard agree is the language from which the word originated), published a definitive study in 1978 stating that it means "people who speak a different language."[7][16]

Since the 1970s in Canada and Greenland Eskimo has widely been considered offensive, owing to folklore and derogatory usage. In 1977 The Inuit Circumpolar Conference meeting in Barrow, Alaska, officially adopted Inuit as a designation for all circumpolar native peoples, regardless of their local view on an appropriate term. As a result the Canadian government usage has replaced the (locally) defunct term Eskimo with Inuit (Inuk in singular). The preferred term in Canada's Central Arctic is Inuinnaq,[18] and in the eastern Canadian Arctic Inuit. The language is often called Inuktitut, though other local designations are also used.

The Inuit of Greenland refer to themselves as Greenlanders or, in their own language, Kalaallit, and to their language as Greenlandic or Kalaallisut.[1]

Because of the linguistic, ethnic, and cultural differences between Yupik and Inuit peoples there is uncertainty as to the acceptance of any term encompassing all Yupik and Inuit people. There has been some movement to use Inuit, and the Inuit Circumpolar Council, representing a circumpolar population of 150,000 Inuit and Yupik people of Greenland, Canada, Alaska, and Siberia, in its charter defines Inuit for use within the ICC as including "the Inupiat, Yupik (Alaska), Inuit, Inuvialuit (Canada), Kalaallit (Greenland) and Yupik (Russia)."[19] However, even the Inuit people in Alaska refer themselves as Inupiat (the language is Inupiaq) and do not typically use the term Inuit. Thus, in Alaska, Eskimo is in common usage, and is the preferred term when speaking collectively of all Inupiat and Yupik people, or of all Inuit and Yupik people of the world.[1]

Alaskans also use the term Alaska Native, which is inclusive of all Eskimo, Aleut and Indian people of Alaska, and is exclusive of Inuit or Yupik people originating outside the state. The term Alaska Native has important legal usage in Alaska and the rest of the United States as a result of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971.

The term "Eskimo" is also used world wide in linguistic or ethnographic works to denote the larger branch of Eskimo-Aleut languages, the smaller branch being Aleut.

Inuit

An Inuit family, c.1917

The Inuit inhabit the Arctic and northern Bering Sea coasts of Alaska and Arctic coasts of the Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Quebec, Labrador, and Greenland. Until fairly recent times, there has been a remarkable homogeneity in the culture throughout this area, which traditionally relied on fish, sea mammals, and land animals for food, heat, light, clothing and tools. They maintain a unique Inuit culture.

Alaska's Inupiat

The Inupiat people are the Inuit people of Alaska's Northwest Arctic and North Slope boroughs and the Bering Straits region, including the Seward Peninsula. Barrow, the northernmost city in the United States, is in the Inupiaq region. Their language is known as Inupiaq.

Canada's Inuit

Canadian Inuit live primarily in Nunavut (a territory of Canada), Nunavik (the northern part of Quebec) and in Nunatsiavut (the Inuit settlement region in Labrador).

Inuvialuit

The Inuvialuit live in the western Canadian Arctic region. Their homeland - the Inuvialuit Settlement Region - covers the Arctic Ocean coastline area from the Alaskan border east to Amundsen Gulf and includes the western Canadian Arctic Islands. The land was demarked in 1984 by the Inuvialuit Final Agreement.

Kalaallit

The Kalaallit live in Greenland, which is called Kalaallit Nunaat in Kalaallisut.

Yupik

The Yupik are indigenous or aboriginal peoples who live along the coast of western Alaska, especially on the Yukon-Kuskokwim delta and along the Kuskokwim River (Central Alaskan Yup'ik), in southern Alaska (the Alutiiq) and along the eastern coast of Chukotka in the Russian Far East and St. Lawrence Island in western Alaska (the Siberian Yupik). The Yupik economy has traditionally been strongly dominated by the harvest of marine mammals, especially seals, walrus, and whales.[20]

Alutiiq

The Alutiiq also called Pacific Yupik or Sugpiaq, are a southern, coastal branch of Yupik. They are not to be confused with the Aleuts, who live further to the southwest, including along the Aleutian Islands. They traditionally lived a coastal lifestyle, subsisting primarily on ocean resources such as salmon, halibut, and whales, as well as rich land resources such as berries and land mammals. Alutiiq people today live in coastal fishing communities, where they work in all aspects of the modern economy, while also maintaining the cultural value of subsistence. The Alutiiq language is relatively close to that spoken by the Yupik in the Bethel, Alaska area, but is considered a distinct language with two major dialects: the Koniag dialect, spoken on the Alaska Peninsula and on Kodiak Island, and the Chugach dialect, is spoken on the southern Kenai Peninsula and in Prince William Sound. Residents of Nanwalek, located on southern part of the Kenai Peninsula near Seldovia, speak what they call Sugpiaq and are able to understand those who speak Yupik in Bethel. With a population of approximately 3,000, and the number of speakers in the mere hundreds, Alutiiq communities are currently in the process of revitalizing their language.

Central Alaskan Yup'ik

Yup'ik, with an apostrophe, denotes the speakers of the Central Alaskan Yup'ik language, who live in western Alaska and southwestern Alaska from southern Norton Sound to the north side of Bristol Bay, on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, and on Nelson Island. The use of the apostrophe in the name Yup'ik denotes a longer pronunciation of the p sound than found in Siberian Yupik. Of all the Alaska Native languages, Central Alaskan Yup'ik has the most speakers, with about 10,000 of a total Yup'ik population of 21,000 still speaking the language. There are five dialects of Central Alaskan Yup'ik, including General Central Yup'ik and the Egegik, Norton Sound, Hooper Bay-Chevak, Nunivak, dialects. In the latter two dialects, both the language and the people are called Cup'ik.[21]

Siberian Yupik

Siberian Yupik reside along the Bering Sea coast of the Chukchi Peninsula in Siberia in the Russian Far East[4] and in the villages of Gambell and Savoonga on St. Lawrence Island in Alaska.[22] The Central Siberian Yupik spoken on the Chukchi Peninsula and on St. Lawrence Island is nearly identical. About 1,050 of a total Alaska population of 1,100 Siberian Yupik people in Alaska still speak the language, and it is still the first language of the home for most St. Lawrence Island children. In Siberia, about 300 of a total of 900 Siberian Yupik people still learn and study the language, though it is no longer learned as a first language by children.[22]

Naukan

About 70 of 400 Naukan people still speak the Naukanski. The Naukan originate on the Chukot Peninsula in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug in Siberia.[4]

Sireniki Eskimos

Some speakers of Siberian Yupik languages used to speak an Eskimo variant in the past, before they underwent a language shift. These former speakers of Sireniki Eskimo language inhabited settlements Sireniki, Imtuk, and some small villages stretching to the west from Sireniki along south-eastern coasts of Chukchi Peninsula,[23] they lived in neighborhood with Siberian Yupik and Chukchi peoples. As early as in 1895, Imtuk was already a settlement with mixed population, Sireniki Eskimos and Ungazigmit[24] (the latter belonging to Siberian Yupik). Sireniki Eskimo culture has been influenced by that of Chukchi (witnessed also by folktale motifs[25]), also the language shows Chukchi language influences.[26]

The above mentioned peculiarities of this (already extinct) Eskimo language amounted to mutual unintelligibility even with its nearest language relatives:[27] in the past, Sireniki Eskimos even had to use the unrelated Chukchi language as a lingua franca for communicating with Siberian Yupik.[26]

Many words are formed from entirely different roots than in Siberian Yupik,[28] but even the grammar has several peculiarities not only among Eskimo languages, but even compared to Aleut. For example, dual number is not known in Sireniki Eskimo, while most Eskimo-Aleut languages have dual,[29] including its neighboring Siberian Yupik relatives.[30]

Little is known about the origin of this diversity. According to a supposition, the peculiarities of this language may be the result of a supposed long isolation from other Eskimo groups,[31][32] being in contact only with speakers of unrelated languages for many centuries. Influence by Chukchi language is clear.[26]

Because of all these, the mere classification of Sireniki Eskimo language is not settled yet:[33] Sireniki language is sometimes regarded as a third branch of Eskimo (at least, its possibility is mentioned),[33][34][35] but sometimes it is regarded rather as a group belonging to the Yupik branch.[36][37]

Dialects

Inuit languages comprise a dialect continuum, or dialect chain, that stretches from Unalaska and Norton Sound in Alaska, across northern Alaska and Canada, and east all the way to Greenland. Changes from western (Inupiaq) to eastern dialects are marked by the dropping of vestigial Yupik-related features, increasing consonant assimilation (e.g., kumlu, meaning "thumb," changes to kuvlu, changes to kublu,[38] changes to kulluk,[38] changes to kulluq[38]), and increased consonant lengthening, and lexical change. Thus, speakers of two adjacent Inuit dialects would usually be able to understand one another, but speakers from dialects distant from each other on the dialect continuum would have difficulty understanding one another.[4]

The four Yupik languages, including Alutiiq (Sugpiaq), Central Alaskan Yup'ik, Naukan (Naukanski), and Siberian Yupik are distinct languages with phonological, morphological, and lexical differences, and demonstrating limited mutual intelligibility. Additionally, both Alutiiq Central Yup'ik have considerable dialect diversity. The northernmost Yupik languages — Siberian Yupik and Naukanski Yupik — are linguistically only slightly closer to Inuit than is Alutiiq, which is the southernmost of the Yupik languages. Although the grammatical structures of Yupik and Inuit languages are similar, they have pronounced differences phonologically, and differences of vocabulary between Inuit and any of one of the Yupik languages is greater than between any two Yupik languages.[4]

The Sirenikski language is sometimes regarded as a third branch of the Eskimo language family, but other sources regard it as a group belonging to the Yupik branch.[4]

An overview of the Eskimo-Aleut languages family is given below:

Aleut
Aleut language
Western-Central dialects: Atkan, Attuan, Unangan, Bering (60-80 speakers)
Eastern dialect: Unalaskan, Pribilof (400 speakers)
Eskimo (Yup'ik, Yuit, and Inuit)
Yupik
Central Alaskan Yup'ik (10,000 speakers)
Alutiiq or Pacific Gulf Yup'ik (400 speakers)
Central Siberian Yupik or Yuit (Chaplinon and St Lawrence Island, 1400 speakers)
Naukan (70 speakers)
Inuit or Inupik (75,000 speakers)
Iñupiaq (northern Alaska, 3,500 speakers)
Inuvialuktun (western Canada; together with Siglitun, Natsilingmiutut, Inuinnaqtun and Uummarmiutun 765 speakers)
Inuktitut (eastern Canada; together with Inuktun and Inuinnaqtun, 30,000 speakers)
Kalaallisut (Greenland, 47,000 speakers)
Sireniki Eskimo language (Sirenikskiy) (extinct)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Kaplan, Lawrence. (2002). "Inuit or Eskimo: Which names to use?". Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
  2. ^ "Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms". Department of Justice Canada.
  3. ^ a b c d ""Comparative Eskimo Dictionary with Aleut Cognates"". Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kaplan, Lawrence. (2001-12-10). "Comparative Yupik and Inuit". Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
  5. ^ Goddard, Ives (1984). "Synonymy." In Arctic, ed. David Damas. Vol. 5 of Handbook of North American Indians, ed. William C. Sturtevant, pp. 5-7. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. Cited in Campbell 1997
  6. ^ Campbell, Lyle (1997). American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America, pg. 394. New York: Oxford University Press
  7. ^ a b c Mailhot, J. (1978). "L'étymologie de «Esquimau» revue et corrigée." Etudes Inuit/Inuit Studies 2-2:59-70. Cite error: The named reference "mailhot" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  8. ^ a b Historical Dictionary of the Inuit By Pamela R. Stern
  9. ^ The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition
  10. ^ wikitravel == Greenland
  11. ^ a b Ostgroenland-Hilfe Project
  12. ^ a b usage note, Inuit, American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition, 2000
  13. ^ a b Setting the Record Straight About Native Languages: What Does "Eskimo" Mean In Cree?
  14. ^ a b "Eskimo" by Mark Israel
  15. ^ Goddard, Ives (1984). Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 5 (Arctic). Smithsonian Institution. ISBN 978-0160045806.
  16. ^ a b Cree Mailing List Digest November 1997
  17. ^ Eskimo, American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition, 2000
  18. ^ Ohokak, G. Inuinnaqtun-English Dictionary. Kitikmeot Heritage Society. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  19. ^ Inuit Circumpolar Council. (2006). "Charter." Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
  20. ^ Yupik. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved January 13, 2008, from: Encyclopædia Britannica Online
  21. ^ Alaska Native Language Center. (2001-12-07). "Central Alaskan Yup'ik." Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
  22. ^ a b Alaska Native Language Center. (2001-12-07). "Siberian Yupik." Alaska Native Language Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
  23. ^ Vakhtin 1998: 162
  24. ^ Меновщиков 1964: 7
  25. ^ Меновщиков 1964: 132
  26. ^ a b c Menovshchikov 1990: 70
  27. ^ Меновщиков 1964: 6–7
  28. ^ Меновщиков 1964: 42
  29. ^ Меновщиков 1964: 38
  30. ^ Меновщиков 1964: 81
  31. ^ Меновщиков 1962: 11
  32. ^ Меновщиков 1964: 9
  33. ^ a b Vakhtin 1998: 161
  34. ^ Linguist List's description about Nikolai Vakhtin's book: The Old Sirinek Language: Texts, Lexicon, Grammatical Notes. The author's untransliterated (original) name is “Н.Б. Вахтин”.
  35. ^ "Языки эскимосов". ICC Chukotka (in Russian). Inuit Circumpolar Council.
  36. ^ Ethnologue Report for Eskimo-Aleut
  37. ^ Kaplan 1990: 136
  38. ^ a b c "thumb". Asuilaak Living Dictionary. Retrieved 2007-11-25.

References

  • Kaplan, Lawrence D. (1990). "The Language of the Alaskan Inuit". In Dirmid R. F. Collis (ed.). Arctic Languages. An Awakening. Vendôme: UNESCO. pp. 131–158. ISBN 92-3-102661-5. {{cite book}}: |format= requires |url= (help); External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)
  • Menovshchikov, Georgy (= Г. А. Меновщиков) (1990). "Contemporary Studies of the Eskimo-Aleut Languages and Dialects: A Progress Report". In Dirmid R. F. Collis (ed.). Arctic Languages. An Awakening. Vendôme: UNESCO. pp. 69–76. ISBN 92-3-102661-5. {{cite book}}: |format= requires |url= (help); External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)
  • Vakhtin, Nikolai (1998). "Endangered Languages in Northeast Siberia: Siberian Yupik and other Languages of Chukotka". In Erich Kasten (ed.). Bicultural Education in the North: Ways of Preserving and Enhancing Indigenous Peoples’ Languages and Traditional Knowledge (pdf). Münster: Waxmann Verlag. pp. 159–173. ISBN 978-3-89325-651-8. {{cite book}}: External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)

Cyrillic

  • Меновщиков, Г. А. (1964). Язык сиреникских эскимосов. Фонетика, очерк морфологии, тексты и словарь. Москва • Ленинград,: Академия Наук СССР. Институт языкознания.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) The transliteration of author's name, and the rendering of title in English: Menovshchikov, G. A. (1964). Language of Sireniki Eskimos. Phonetics, morphology, texts and vocabulary. Moscow • Leningrad: Academy of Sciences of the USSR.

Further reading

Origin of the name