Alaska Periodic Table:[Aleut][Athna][Deg Xinag][Eyak][Gwichin][Haida][Hän]Holikachuk][Inupiaq]Koyukon][Tanacross][Tanaina][Tlingit][Yupik]Russian Alaska[Russian Alaska]

P.T. North America Periodické tabulky v americké angličtině (rozdíl v názvosloví oproti kontinentální  angličtině u hliníku Al a cesia Cs, nejednotné názvy u síry S a u fosforu P) Periodické tabulky v kanadské angličtině (rozdíl v názvosloví oproti americké angličtině u W - v kanadské WOLFRAM v americké TUNGSTEN). Hlavní tabulku (foto.JPG přivezl Kuba ze svého ročního pobytu v Kanadě)  Aleut Periodic Tables of the Elements Inupiaq Periodic Table - Periodicka tabulka v aljasske eskymactine (pod vlajkou Aljašky) Inuktitut Periodic Table - Periodicka tabulka v nunavutske eskymactine Inuttut Periodic Table - Periodicka tabulka v labradorske eskymactine Cree Periodic Table Tlingit Periodic Table Gwich'in Periodic Table Alaskan Haida Periodic Table Plautdietsch - varianta Low German používaná křesťanskou skupinou Minnonity v Kanadě a v USA Dogrib Periodic Table Anishinaabe - Ojibwe - nazvy nekolika chemickych prvku v jazyku americkych indianu odzibvejstine (anisinabemovstine) Salish(an) Periodic Table Lakota Periodic Table Aparaho Periodic table Chinook Periodic Table Mingo - nazvy nekolika chemickych prvku v jazyku americkych indianu Mingo Cherokee Periodic Table Alabama - nazvy nekolika chemickych prvku v jazyku Alabama, ktery pouzivaji Indiani zijici ve statu Texa (USA) Navajo Periodic Table Hawaiian- nazvy chemickych prvku v havajstine language


Tlingit language

1A 2A 3B 4B 5B 6B 7B 8B 8B 8B 1B 2B 3A 4A 5A 6A 7A 8A
 
Alaska British Columbia Yukon

Tlingit Periodic Table
Periodická tabulka v tlingičtině

  USA flag Canada flag
 
   

Tlingit language

           
    Al
géxtl'
         
              Fe
Fe / Sn
1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska
    Cu

1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska
             
                    Ag
dáanaa
    Sn
Fe / Sn
       
                    Au
góon
    Pb
       

Fe / SnCuPb

[English - Tlingit dictionary][2]
16.12.2012 18:29:56

Tlingit, or Lingít, is the ancestral language of the Tlingit people.  The traditional home of the Tlingits is the coast of what is now southeast Alaska, stretching from west of Yakutat down to Ketchikan.  There are also many Tlingits who hail from the interior, in adjacent parts of northern British Columbia and the southern Yukon Territory, particularly the towns of Teslin, Carcross, and Atlin.  Today, you will also find many Tlingits living in the larger towns and cities on the west coast, from Anchorage to Seattle and down to San Francisco, as well as Whitehorse in the Yukon.

Alphabet Tlingit Alaska languages

AlaskaEyak names chemical elements (extinc 2008)USA flag

Au Ag Cu Fe
    1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska   1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska
[Eyak - English dictionary]
Eyak is an extinct Na-Dené language historically spoken by the Eyak people, indigenous to south-central Alaska, near the mouth of the Copper River.

The closest relatives of Eyak are the Athabaskan languages. The Eyak–Athabaskan cluster, together with Tlingit, forms the basic division of the Na-Dené language phylum.

Numerous Tlingit place names along the Gulf Coast are derived from names in Eyak; they have obscure or even nonsensical meanings in Tlingit, but oral tradition has maintained many Eyak etymologies. The existence of Eyak-derived Tlingit names along most of the coast towards southeast Alaska is strong evidence that the prehistoric range of Eyak was once far greater than it was at the time of European contact. This confirms both Tlingit and Eyak oral histories of migration throughout the region.

Marie Smith Jones (May 14, 1918 – January 21, 2008) was the last surviving speaker of the Eyak language of Southcentral Alaska.

Alaska Periodic Table:[Aleut][Athna][Deg Xinag][Eyak][Gwichin][Haida][Hän]Holikachuk][Inupiaq]Koyukon][Tanacross][Tanaina][Tlingit][Yupik]Russian Alaska[Russian Alaska]


AlaskaAhtna names chemical elements USA flag

  Ahtna dialects
  Lower Central Mentasta (in Upper)
Au ltsoghi ts' es dicaaxi
Cu c' etsiy
1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska
c' etsii
Fe tsedi
1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska
tsetsaan'

[Ahtna - English dictionary][2]

  Ahtna or Ahtena is the Na-Dené language of the Ahtna ethnic group of the Copper River area of Alaska. The language is also known as Copper River or Mednovskiy. There are 80 speakers out of a population of 500, and the language is facing extinction but many younger people are learning it to try to keep it from extinction. The Ya Ne Dah Ah School in Chickaloon, Alaska teaches the Ahtna language as a part of its curriculum.

The Ahtna language consists of four different dialects, three (Lower, Central and Upper) of the four are still spoken today. Ahtna closely related to Dena'ina.

Ahtna  map and dictionary

Ahtna  language
Map  language
   

Alaska Periodic Table:[Aleut][Athna][Deg Xinag][Eyak][Gwichin][Haida][Hän]Holikachuk][Inupiaq]Koyukon][Tanacross][Tanaina][Tlingit][Yupik]Russian Alaska[Russian Alaska]


AlaskaTanaina names chemical elements USA flag

Au Cu Fe Tanaina
zuluda chuchuna dayin
  1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska   1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska

[Tanaina - English dictionary]

Dena’ina, also Tanaina, is the Athabaskan language of the region surrounding Cook Inlet. It is geographically unique in Alaska as the only Alaska Athabaskan language to include territory which borders salt water. Of the total Dena'ina population of about 900 people, only 75-95 members still speak Dena’ina.

Map  language


Alaska Periodic Table:[Aleut][Athna][Deg Xinag][Eyak][Gwichin][Haida][Hän]Holikachuk][Inupiaq]Koyukon][Tanacross][Tanaina][Tlingit][Yupik]Russian Alaska[Russian Alaska]


AlaskaTanacross names chemical elements USA flag

Cu Fe Tanacross
Audio ch'itsiy
1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska   1839 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska

[Tanacross - English dictionary]

Tanacross (also Transitional Tanana) is an endangered Athabaskan language spoken by fewer than 60 persons in eastern Interior Alaska.


Alaska Periodic Table:[Aleut][Athna][Deg Xinag][Eyak][Gwichin][Haida][Hän]Holikachuk][Inupiaq]Koyukon][Tanacross][Tanaina][Tlingit][Yupik]Russian Alaska[Russian Alaska]


AlaskaUSA flagHän name chemical element YukonCanada flag

 

Fe



The Hän language (Dawson, Han-Kutchin, Moosehide) is a Native American endangered language spoken in only two places: Eagle, Alaska and Dawson City, Yukon. There are only a few fluent speakers left (perhaps about 10), all of them elderly.

Eagle,_Alaska
Dawson_City,_Yukon
Map  language

[Hän - English dictionary]


Alaska Periodic Table:[Aleut][Athna][Deg Xinag][Eyak][Gwichin][Haida][Hän]Holikachuk][Inupiaq]Koyukon][Tanacross][Tanaina][Tlingit][Yupik]Russian Alaska[Russian Alaska]


Deg_Xinag_languageDeg Xinag (Deg Hit’an) names chemical elements USA flag

Au Cu Fe Hg
Den-gi dithiq'izr
Noqoggiy dithiq'izr
Soldaq
Den-gi q'izrAudio
Dithiq'izr DanganAudio

1847 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska
Goldaq Deg_Xinag_language

[Deg Xinag - English dictionary][2]

Deg Xinag is a Northern Athabaskan language spoken by the Deg Hit’an peoples in Shageluk and Anvik and at Holy Cross along the lower Yukon River in Alaska. The language is nearly extinct, as most people are shifting to English.


AlaskaHolikachuk name chemical element (extinc 2012)USA flag

Fe Holikachuk_language
Danan

[Holikachuk - English dictionary]

Holikachuk (own name: Doogh Qinag) was an Athabaskan language formerly spoken at the village of Holikachuk (Hiyeghelinhdi) on the Innoko River in central Alaska. In 1962, residents of Holikachuk relocated to Grayling on the lower Yukon River. Holikachuk is intermediate between the Deg Xinag and Koyukon languages, linguistically closer to Koyukon but socially much closer to Deg Xinag. Though it was recognized by scholars as a distinct language as early as the 1840s, it was only definitively identified in the 1970s. Of about 180 Holikachuk people, only about 5 spoke the language in 2007. In March 2012, the last living native speaker of Holikachuk died in Alaska.

Map  language


Alaska Periodic Table:[Aleut][Athna][Deg Xinag][Eyak][Gwichin][Haida][Hän]Holikachuk][Inupiaq]Koyukon][Tanacross][Tanaina][Tlingit][Yupik]Russian Alaska[Russian Alaska]


AlaskaKoyukon names chemical elements USA flag

Central Koyukon Lower Koyukon
Au Cu Fe Cu Fe
Zolda Ts'ooghooniyh Tsobee' 1847 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska   1847 - Azbukou z doby, kdy byla Aljaška součástí Ruska
[Central Koyukon dictionary][2]  

Koyukon (also called Denaakk'e) is an Athabaskan language spoken along the Koyukuk and middle Yukon River in western interior Alaska. In 2007 it had about 150 speakers - generally older adults bilingual in English - from an ethnic population of 2,300.

The Koyukon language has three dialect divisions. Central Koyukon is spoken on the Yukon River in the villages of Galena, Ruby, Koyukuk and part of Tanana and on the Koyukuk River in the villages of Huslia, Hughes, and Hlakaket. Hughes and Allakaket are slightly different from the other villages speaking Central Koyukon, but the spelling remains the same. Forms that have no dialect abbreviation are common for all of Koyukon, but are spelled as they are pronounced in Centra1 Koyukon. Lower Koyukon is spoken in the villages of Kaltag and Nulato. Upper Koyukon is spoken at Stevens Village, Rampart, and part of Tanana.


PT in Eskimo-Aleut languages: Eskimo: Inuit: Greenlandic Greenlandic Inuktitut Inuktitut Inupiaq Inupiaq Inuttut Labrador Inuktitut (Inuttut) Inuvialuk Inuvialuk Yupik: Siberian and Alaskan Russian Siberian Yupik American - Alaskan Yupik _Aleut_ Aleut language

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