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Shæ! “Sha” and Identity in southwest Louisiana

Back in the early 20th century, before 1920, all Creole Parishes in Louisiana were overwhelmingly Francophone, Creolophone, or both. By Creole Parish, IRead More

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Filed Under: History, Identity, Language Tagged With: Cadien, Cadiens, Cajun, Cajun French, Cajuns, Créoles de la Louisiane, Créoles louisianais, Kourí-Viní, Kréyol Lalwizyan, Lalwizyan, Louisiana, Louisiana Creole, Louisiana Creoles, Louisiana French, Louisiana languages, Louisiane, moun kréyol Lalwizyàn

Louisiana’s Great French Historical Writers Tell A Different Story

Captain Jean Bernard Bossu, was an 18th century traveler-writer and primary source for students of French Colonial Studies of Louisiana. What is hisRead More

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Filed Under: Cuisine, Genealogy, History, Language, Latinité, Migrations, Names Tagged With: Acadians, Acadians in Louisiana, Alabamans, André Pénicault, Antoine Lamotte de Cadillac, Atakapas, Cajun French, Carl Ekberg, CODOFIL, Colonial French, Colonial Illinois, Courreurs de bois, courreurs des bois, Coushatta, Creolization, French and Indian War, French Canadian, Houmas, Illinois, Ishak, Jambalaya, Jean Bernard Bossu, Jean-Baptiste LeMoyne, John Lafleur II, Joseph Trègre, Louisiana Creole, Mobilian Choctaw, Okelousas, ouaouaron, pacanes, Pensacolas, Pierre-Clément de Laussat, plakemine, Seminoles, Seven Years War, Shambahlaha, soco, Tunica-Biloxi, Upper Louisiana

Language Death and Stylistic Variation: An Intergenerational Study of the substitution of /h/ for /ʒ/ in the French of the Pointe-au-Chien Indians.

CITATIONS (MLA) Carmichael, Katie. “Language Death and Stylistic Variation: An Intergenerational Study of the substitution of /h/ for /ʒ/ in the French ofRead More

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Filed Under: Dissertations & Theses, Language Tagged With: Cajun French, Cajun Indians, Louisiana French, Louisiana French language, Pointe au Chien Indians, Pointe-au-Chien

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