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Published by Amer Anthropologist, 1947
Seller: Larry W Price Books, Portland, OR, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical
Pamphlet. Condition: Very Good. Vol 49, pp. 588-600, Extracted from orig vol, thus begins with title page, trimmed & stapled pamphlet, else VG.
Published by Linguistic Society of America, Baltimore, MD, 1945
Seller: Great Matter Books, Grand Rapids, MI, U.S.A.
Book
Soft cover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Wraps are toned, especially at staples, some wear at edges, bumping to corners. Internally clean, no marks of highlighting. A good, solid copy. All of our books are individually examined and described. Never X-library unless specifically described as such.
Published by Archives of Languages of the World, Anthropology Department, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, 1958
Seller: Cat's Cradle Books, Archdale, NC, U.S.A.
Softcover. Stapled binding is sound. Pages tanned with handling wear, otherwise clean. Wrappers have water-spotting, tanning, handling wear. Date stamp at lower rear wrapper. ; Contents: Chao, How Chinese logic operates. Voegelin, Model-directed structuralization. Harris, The transformational model of language structure. Trager, The systematization of the whorf hypothesis. Carroll, An operational model for language behavior. ; 11.0" tall; 54 pages. Good with No dust jacket as issued.
Published by Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis, 1939
Softcover. Condition: Near fine. 10" x 6.75", pp 173-239. Issued as Prehistory Research Series Volume I, Number 6. Scuff mark on front wrapper, else fine. A compilation of texts of the Hitadsa people of both linguistic and folkloric interest, collected by pioneering anthropologist Robert Lowie in 1911, but not published until more than two decades later, with notes and transcriptions provided by Harris and Voegelin. As described in the introduction, "this paper brings to the reader a sampling of more than one important aspect of the life and language of the Hidatsa Indians, now residing near their former earth-lodge villages of the upper Missouri and its tributaries on the Fort Berthold reservation, together with two other village tribes of the Northern Plains, the Mandan and the Arikara. For folkloric interest, two cycles of Hidatsa mythology are represented in the texts.one concerned with the origin of heavenly bodies and and the other with the adventures of the creator-trickster." The Hidatsa language is a Siouan language closely related to that of the Crow people.