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  1. The Ojibwe People's Dictionary is part of that greater project. Sounds and Orthography. Double-Vowel Alphabet . The Ojibwe People's Dictionary uses the Double-Vowel system to write Ojibwe words. This alphabet has become the standard writing system for Ojibwe in the United States and in some parts of Canada.

  2. The Cree-Saulteaux Roman system, also known as the Cree Standard Roman Orthography (Cree SRO), is based on the Canadian Aboriginal syllabics and is found in northern Ontario, southern Manitoba and southern Saskatchewan.

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    • Terminology: Anishinaabe and Ojibwe
    • Algonquian Linguistic Family
    • Writing The Language
    • Speaking The Language
    • Notable Features
    • Current State of The Language

    Though many may use the terms Anishinaabe and Ojibwe interchangeably, they can have different meanings. Anishinaabe can describe various Indigenous peoples in North America. It can also mean the language group shared by the Ojibwe, Odawa, and Potawatomi peoples. Ojibwe, on the other hand, refers to a specific Anishinaabe nation. Anishinaabeg is the...

    Anishinaabemowin is part of the Central Algonquian language family, which is a group of closely-related Indigenous languages (such as Odawa, Potawatomi, Cree, Menominee, Sauk, Fox and Shawnee) with similar sounds, words and features. The Central Algonquian language is part of the larger Algonquian language family, which spans from the Rocky Mountai...

    Anishinaabemowin began as an orally transmitted language. Historically, there was a specialized form of symbol writing to communicate teachings sacred to the Ojibwe people. While Anishinaabeg continue to honour symbol writing, written forms of Anishinaabemowin using Roman orthography (i.e., the Latin alphabet, such as that used by the Englishlangua...

    Traditional knowledge holders share that the language was originally created by Nanaboozhoo(sometimes spelled Nanabozo, also called Wenaboozhoo and Nanabush) after Gizhe Manidoo gave him life, lowered him to the Earth, and gave him the responsibility to name everything in existence. By means of Nanaboozhoo’s task, Anishinaabemowin was born and spok...

    Verbs Anishinaabemowin is dominated by verbs. Concepts of life, process and action are woven into the fabric of the language. General categories of verbs used to express a thought in Anishinaabemowin include: 1. Verb animate intransitive (where a living subject is doing something/being a certain way) 2. Verb animate intransitive + object (where a l...

    Anishinaabemowin is a considered an endangered language. Assimilationist policies and programs, such as the residential schoolsystem in Canada (and the boarding school system in the United States), have led to the decline of language use. However, there are efforts to revitalize the language. Immersion programs allow students to speak the language ...

  4. Type of writing system: syllabary. Writing direction: left to right in horizontal lines. Used to write: Ojibwe (Anishinaabemowin / ᐊᓂᔑᓈᐯᒧᐎᓐ)

  5. The Ojibwe people devised a system of writing on birch bark long before contact with Europeans. However, this writing system functioned as mnemonic devices rather than as modern orthography. In 1848, a syllabic orthography was developed for the Ojibwe language that enjoyed widespread success and use, especially in Canada.

  6. The double vowel system was created by Charles Fiero (working with fluent speakers) in the late 1950s and is used by Anishinaabe teachers, elders, translators, administrators, language activists, and students seeking a common Anishinaabemowin orthography.

  7. A NOTE ON OJiBWE ORTHOGRAPHY O ur language is not meant to be written. For generations it has always been passed down, has always been taught as a part of our oral tradition, and it makes us who we are. Ever since I became an educator utilizing our language in the classroom in the 1950s, there have been many orthogra-phies that have come and gone.

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