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Gathering Eggs and Peach Tree, by Emma McLeod

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  • čas přidán 16. 04. 2023
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    Emma McLeod shares a story about growing up at Connerville, Oklahoma, during a time with no running water nor electricity. Like other rural Chickasaws, Emma and her family raised and hunted their own food. Emma is a recipient of the Chickasaw Silver Feather Award (2012), a member of the Chickasaw Language Committee, and a former Master Speaker in the Chickasaw Master-Apprentice Program (2007 - 2015).
    Transcriptions: If what was said cannot be heard well enough, it is marked as being (inaudible). In some instances, a speaker may go back and correct themselves, and these are marked like \this\, to indicate that \this\ replaces the previous word or phrase. Sometimes we are unsure what the speaker was saying but we give a best guess using a star*. If a speaker is shortening a word, we give the fuller form in (parentheses) next to it.
    Translations: The English translations were done with guidance from native speakers. Sometimes, some clarifying words were added in [brackets], although this information is not part of what was actually said in Chikashshanompaꞌ.
    Recording: This audio was recorded on August 7, 2017, as part of a Documenting Endangered Languages / National Science Foundation grant (BCS-1263699 and BCS-1263698). This work was supported in part by an American Rescue Plan grant, #90XN0047.
    Image: Photograph by Ryan RedCorn (Osage).
    www.chickasawlanguage.com
    www.chickasaw.tv/language
    www.chickasaw.net
    Keywords: Chickasaw, Chickasaw language, Native language, Indigenous Language, Traditional Narratives, American Indian, Native American, First American, National Science
    Foundation

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