Word for the Travel Wise (10/08/06)

Having recently purchased a small Lakota dictionary for beginner’s I thought I’d put it to use here on Gadling. Lakota won’t be a language you run around using on a daily basis even with the majority of speakers in the U.S. For the following word I please note the letter ‘n’ should be more like a ‘n’ with a ‘j’ hanging from the second line of the ‘n’. I don’t have the correct character key, but should you really try pronouncing this one, just beware of the way it appears here and how it should actually appear.

Today’s word is a Lakota word used in North America:

wawíhangya – destroyer

Lakota is spoken in the U.S. in areas which include North Dakota, South Dakota, parts of Nebraska, Minnesota, and Montana. It is also spoken by a few people in Canada and has a total range of 8,000-9,000 speakers in all of North America. Lakota is the largest of the three languages of the Sioux, of the Siouan family as noted in Wikipedia. Head over to their page for a quick read on lingo background info. One last interesting fact is that the language represents one of the largest Native American speech communities left in the United States.

Learning Lakota online will be a bit more challenging than Spanish, but can be done to a certain point. There is a Lakotiya Yahoo group which holds live online classes. You must be a member, but I believe registration is free and from there you can start learning pronunciation and grammar. The Saskatchewan Indian Cultural Center has a decent website which includes quotes form the elders, common terms & phrases (with audio), and a grammar guide. Lakhota.org offers off-line language products like this Speak Lakota Level 2 Textbook which are said to be the finest according to the site. If you’re in the northern plains area of the U.S. try seeking out a native speaker for some lessons, otherwise you can pick up this Everyday Lakota for beginner’s dictionary at the Crazy Horse Memorial or on Amazon.

City Slickers Montana

You
have to love the film City Slickers with Billy Crystal and, of course, Jack Palance, whose grimy, tobacco-chewing cowboy
was one of the finest depictions in the genre since John Wayne…even if it was satire. And every time I think about the
film, I think about dude ranching on Montana. I have to face facts myself. While I lived for years in Colorado, Seattle,
other far-off places, I am a full blown city slicker myself now, so notions of dude ranches flutter in my skull quite
often. How great it would be, I sometimes think to myself, to live again in a place where the tallest things around are
trees and cliffs.

Well, this story out of
Montana
helped rekindle my notions of Montana and the West as the great, gaping place to get away from it all.
Written by the Copy Chief for Fodros, one Linda Schmidt, she headed to Choteau, Montana and worked for the month of
November as a cook at the Seven Lazy P guest ranch outside of Choteau. Take a
read of her interesting little tale.