wanihikīwin = Trapping
2018
Book
"Trapping was and in some areas still a part of a seasonal economic system and lifestyle that includes hunting, fishing and gathering berries and medicinal plants. Indigenous people used the furs of the animals for clothing, the meat of the animals for sustenance and the bones of the animals for tools. Each animal has a story that have been passed down from generation to generation."-- Inside front cover.
Item Details
ISBN: 9781989363508
Description: 7 pages : colour illustrations ; 21 cm.
Target Audience Note:
- Cree Level: A inside cover
- F&P Level: A inside cover
Other Title: Trapping
Notes:
- Includes an English-Cree glossary.
- Cree Word Count: 20; English Word Count: 38.
- Parallel text in English and Woodland Cree (TH dialect, nîhithawîwin) in standard Roman orthography.
Control Number: 2666822
Publisher: Cumberland House, SK : Deschambeault Learning & Publishing, [2018]Series:
Subjects:
- Animals -- Juvenile literature.
- Cree -- Social life and customs -- Juvenile literature.
- Cree -- Trapping -- Juvenile literature.
- Cree language -- TH dialect -- Grammar -- Juvenile literature.
- Cree language -- TH dialect -- Juvenile literature.
- Cree language -- TH dialect -- Nouns -- Juvenile literature.
- Cree language -- TH dialect -- Study and teaching -- Juvenile literature.
- Cree language -- TH dialect -- Vocabulary -- Juvenile literature.
- Trapping -- Juvenile literature.
- Woodland Cree language -- Grammar -- Juvenile literature.
- Woodland Cree language -- Juvenile literature.
- Woodland Cree language -- Nouns -- Juvenile literature.
- Woodland Cree language -- Study and teaching -- Juvenile literature.
- Woodland Cree language -- Vocabulary -- Juvenile literature.
- nîhithawîwin -- Grammar -- Juvenile literature.
- nîhithawîwin -- Juvenile literature.
- nîhithawîwin -- Nouns -- Juvenile literature.
- nîhithawîwin -- Study and teaching -- Juvenile literature.
- nîhithawîwin -- Vocabulary -- Juvenile literature.
Genre:
Other Authors: