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Trivial Self Education

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Native American Language Net: Preserving and promoting indigenous American Indian languages. Submit your writing Support our organization What's new on our site today! Welcome to Native Languages of the Americas! We are a small non-profit organization dedicated to the survival of Native American languages, particularly through the use of Internet technology. Our website is not beautiful. Sponsored Links Native Languages of the Americas Online Resources Alphabetical master list of Native American languages, with links to specific information about each language and its native speakers.

Linguistic family groupings showing the relationships between Amerindian languages. Vocabulary lists in various American Indian languages. Native American language learning worksheets including picture dictionaries, parts of the body, and pronunciation guides. List of Native American cultures featured on our site. Geographical index of Native American tribes grouped by continent, country, and state or province. Maps of Native American culture areas of the Western Hemisphere. Native American Language Families. Fallacy List. 1. FAULTY CAUSE: (post hoc ergo propter hoc) mistakes correlation or association for causation, by assuming that because one thing follows another it was caused by the other. example: A black cat crossed Babbs' path yesterday and, sure enough, she was involved in an automobile accident later that same afternoon. example: The introduction of sex education courses at the high school level has resulted in increased promiscuity among teens.

A recent study revealed that the number of reported cases of STDs (sexually transmitted diseases) was significantly higher for high schools that offered courses in sex education than for high schools that did not. 2. SWEEPING GENERALIZATION: (dicto simpliciter) assumes that what is true of the whole will also be true of the part, or that what is true in most instances will be true in all instances. example: Muffin must be rich or have rich parents, because she belongs to ZXQ, and ZXQ is the richest sorority on campus. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.

Mythology

Binary - it's digitalicious! Common Haitian Creole (Kreyol) Phrases. CREOLE - ENGLISH * * * * * * * * * * * Bonjou! - Good morning! Bonswa! - Good afternoon! /Evening! (used after 11 AM) Komon ou ye? * * * * * * * * * * * * PRONUNCIATION GUIDE Creole is written phonetically. Ch-share chache-to look for o-claw fo-strong e-aim ede-to aid, help ou-you ou-you e-leg mesi-thank you r-(not rolled) respire-to breathe g-go gen-to have I-see isit-here s-(always s) prese-in a hurry j-(avoid the d sound) jou-day y-yes pye-foot o-toe zo-bone There are nasal sounds in Creole just as there are nasal sounds in French, which are pronounced partially through the nose, but without the "n" itself pronounced (a rare exception to the general pronunciation rule of pronouncing every letter).

An-alms dan-tooth en-chopin pen-bread on-don't bon-good A. Masterlock-01.png (PNG Image, 1872x1224 pixels) - Scaled (52%) 35 Websites For Free Ebooks Download. Paste the text you want to speed read.