38 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OP THE 



Gill (J. K.) — Continued. 



and published iii 1846 in my volume of the IT. 

 S. Exploring Expedition series. These were 

 supplemented by later information obtained 

 from the excellent dictionary of George Gibbs 

 and from the letter.s and publications of Mr. 

 Eells and Dr. Boas. I should have preferred to 

 retain the ' scientific orthography' (consonants 

 as in English, vowels as in Italian) which was 

 adopted in my former work ; but as the. Jargon 

 has now become, through its use by the mis- 

 sionaries and others, a written language with 

 the English orthography, it seemed proper to 

 adopt that spelling, merely adding tlie scien- 

 tific forms in parentheses as a guide to the pro- 

 nunciation. 



"The word meaning out, which Mr. Gill 

 spells klahane (dividing it in his dictionary, I 

 presume, to show that it is a trisyllable) is 

 written by Mr. Eells in his sermon printed in 

 my Jargon volume (p. 32) klahanie (klahanie 

 kopa town, out of town) , and by Mr. Gibbs, Uah- 

 hanie, or klagh-anie, witli the accent affixed to 

 the last syllable. The Jargon has several tri- 

 syllables of this sort, such as saghalie or «a/i- 

 halie, above, keekwilee, below, illahie, earth, 

 which are variously written, and are accented 

 indifferently on the first or on the last syllable. 

 "In Mr. Gill's suggestion that 'Chinooli 

 existed as an intertribal language prior to the 

 necessity of the use of the trapper and trader,' 

 he evidently confounds, as many do, the proper 

 Chinook language with the Jargon, or artificial 

 trade language. The Indians of Oregon terri- 

 tory were quick in learning languages, and 

 some of them could speak five or six native 

 idioms. The genuine Chinook, being spoken 

 by a tribe holding a central position along the 

 Columbia River, and nmch gi^on to trade, would 

 naturally be known to many natives of other 

 tribes, and would be frequently spoken in inter- 

 tribal intercourse, lilce the Chippewa among 

 the eastern Indians and the Malay in the East 

 Indian Archipelago. This was doubtless what 

 was meant by Mr. Gill's aged native informant 

 in referring to the Chinook as the common 

 medium of intercourse before the white traders 

 visited the country. That he could have 

 referred to the Jargon is simply impossible, as 

 the internal eyidence of Its structure suffi- 

 ciently shows. 



"Both philology and ethnography are much 

 indebted to the thoughtful labors of intelligent 

 inquirers likeMr. Gill in preserving these inter- 

 estingrelics of vanishing idioms and aboriginal 

 customs. I ought, perhaps, to add that though 

 the use of the Jargon is dying out, for the rea- 

 son which Mr. Gill so pithily gives, in the 

 country of its origin — the Pacific coast region 

 south of Puget Sound— it is extending in 

 British Columbia and Alaska, and seems 

 likely to do good service there for many years 

 to come." 



Gill's complete dictionary of tlie Chinook 

 Jargon. See Gill (J. K.) 



Gill's dictionary of the Chinook Jargon^ 



(1889-1891.) See Gill (J. K.) 

 Good (jRev. John Booth). A vocabulary 

 I and I outlines of grammar | of the | 

 Nitlakapamuk | or | Thompson tongue, 

 I (The Indian language spoken 

 between Yale, Lillooet, | Cache Creek 

 and Nicola Lake.) | Together with a 

 I Phonetic Chinook Dictionary, | 

 Adapted for use in the Province of | 

 British Columbia. | By J. B. Good, S. 

 P. G. missionary, Yale-Lytton. | By aid 

 of a Grant from the Right Hon. Superin- 

 tendent of Indian | Affairs, Ottawa. | 



Victoria : | Printed, by the St. Paul's 

 Mission Press, (S. P. C. K.) | Collegiate 

 School, '1880. 



Cover title differing from the above in one 

 lino of the imprint only ("Victoria, B.C.:"), 

 tithi as above verso blank 1 1. preface pp. 5-6, 

 text pp. 8-46, 8°. 



Chinook [Jargon] dictionary. English-Chin- 

 ook, alphabetically arranged, in double col- 

 umns, containing about 750 words and the 

 numerals 1-11, 20, 30, 100. 1000, occupies the even 

 numbered pages 8-30, the Thompson vocabu- 

 lary occurring on the alternate, odd-numbered 

 pages. — Conversations, English-Chinook, pp. 

 32, 34. — The Lord's prayer in Jargon, with inter- 

 linear translation in English, p. 34. 



Copies seen : Bancroft, Dunbar, Eames, 

 Mallet, Pilling, Wellesley. 

 Grammar : 



Chinook See Boas (F.) 



Grammatic comments: 



Chinook See Gallatin (A.) 



Chinook Hale (H.) 



Chinook Jargon Crane (A.) 



Chinook Jargon Eells (M.) 



Chinook Jargon Hale (H.) 



AVatlala Bancroft (H, H.) 



Grammatic treatise : 



Chinook See Boas (F.) 



Chinook Miiller (F.) 



Chinook Jargon Bulmer (T. S.) 



Chinook Jargon Demers (M.) et al. 



Chinook Jargon Hale (H.) 



Grasserie (Raoul de la). Etudes | de | 

 grammaire comparee | Des relations 

 grammaticales | consid^r^es dans leur 

 concept et dans leur expression | ou de 

 la I categoric des cas | par | Raoul de 

 la Grasserie | docteur en droit | Juge 

 au Tribunal de Rennes | Membre de la 

 Socicte de Linguistique de Paris. | 



Paris I Jean Maisonneuve, editeur | 

 25, quai Voltaire, | 25 | 1890 



Printed cover as above, half-title verso blank 

 1 1. title as above verso blank 1 1. dedication 

 verso blank 1 1. text pp. 1-344, contents pp. 345- 

 351, 8'3. 



