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Date:         Fri, 24 Sep 2004 17:40:51 -0500
Reply-To:     John Rodgers <inua@CHARTER.NET>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         John Rodgers <inua@CHARTER.NET>
Subject:      Re: pretend it's already Friday (was RE: Spare-tire Pan Bolt Spec
Comments: To: Mark Tuovinen <mst@AK.NET>
In-Reply-To:  <b2c23e03a6a.4153f84b@gci.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

Mark Tuovinen wrote:

> >Good luck, I can't even get a consensus from my Finnish speaking friends on the correct pronunciation of my last name, Tuovinen. It seems that everybody I have asked comes from a different region of the country and each has their own dialect. > >

Mark, that's funny!!

In my golden days of living in Bethel in western Alaska, I discovered that the Eskimo people along the Kuskokwim and Yukon Rivers could not understand each other. There were dialects unique to specific villages, an a person from an upriver village couldn't understand a person from a downriver village, except with some difficulty. Matters got even worse when folks from the Kuskokwim tried talking to folks from the Yukon. It was an interesting conunbrum to me in those old days. With the advent of the Alaska Native Land Claims Settlement Act there was a huge intermixing of native peoples in those regions, for the sake of working out the details to get and comply with the act. The result was somewhat of an amalgamation of the many Kuskokwim and Yukon Yu'pik dialects. Common to them all though was English, which had been brought many years before by the missonaries. Having english as a common language to all really helped in working out the details of the ALCS down to the last individual. The isolation did strange things to language in the old days, but modernization changed things radically. Now all those little villages scattered over the tundra in that part of the world are hooked to the whole world via satelite and the internet, and it has wrought huge changes, some good, some not so good,

Best Regards,

John Rodgers 88 GL Driver Chelsea, AL


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