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Merge - these pages are about the same language; the other's title is aboriginally correct, or on its way there - SENĆOŦEN is the real proper name, although North Straits Salish is more widely known and used, esecially stateside I'd think. This touches on the use of aboriginal spellings as Wiki titles, which is a toic I'm involved in elsewhere but won't dig into here; main thing is to get the me3rge done; I'd rather it be someone from one of these eoles who makes the call, but there are still Wiki guideilness of reconizability to deal with; Saanich exists as the eole article, not WSANEC as it would be in aboriginal selling, so for me it's aboriginal enough, ie as an approximation. Better than Ratisbon/Regensburg or London/Londres. Still, NSS seems to turn u more in Washington-written aboriginal artidcles; Saanich seems a Canadian usage, SENĆOŦEN a specifically those-in-the-know linguistics and First Nations usage; correct but obscure. But what the hell, merge, somebody pick a title. Skookum1 ( talk) 23:04, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
Whether or not they're merged, the "(linguistics)" tags in the titles are not appropriate. These are not linguistics terms, they're social concepts. We're going to end up with hundreds of these "terms" which aren't found in any linguistics glossary. kwami ( talk) 00:35, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
Which bands speak each dialect should be listed, maybe in a table where the list of dialects is right now. Skookum1 ( talk) 04:06, 3 June 2013 (UTC)
Came across mention of them here, based on Semiahmoo lore. Were these people a branch of the NSS-speaking group of maybe closer to Nooskack or Halkomelem speaking groups? Or?? Skookum1 ( talk) 08:51, 3 January 2014 (UTC)
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Merge - these pages are about the same language; the other's title is aboriginally correct, or on its way there - SENĆOŦEN is the real proper name, although North Straits Salish is more widely known and used, esecially stateside I'd think. This touches on the use of aboriginal spellings as Wiki titles, which is a toic I'm involved in elsewhere but won't dig into here; main thing is to get the me3rge done; I'd rather it be someone from one of these eoles who makes the call, but there are still Wiki guideilness of reconizability to deal with; Saanich exists as the eole article, not WSANEC as it would be in aboriginal selling, so for me it's aboriginal enough, ie as an approximation. Better than Ratisbon/Regensburg or London/Londres. Still, NSS seems to turn u more in Washington-written aboriginal artidcles; Saanich seems a Canadian usage, SENĆOŦEN a specifically those-in-the-know linguistics and First Nations usage; correct but obscure. But what the hell, merge, somebody pick a title. Skookum1 ( talk) 23:04, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
Whether or not they're merged, the "(linguistics)" tags in the titles are not appropriate. These are not linguistics terms, they're social concepts. We're going to end up with hundreds of these "terms" which aren't found in any linguistics glossary. kwami ( talk) 00:35, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
Which bands speak each dialect should be listed, maybe in a table where the list of dialects is right now. Skookum1 ( talk) 04:06, 3 June 2013 (UTC)
Came across mention of them here, based on Semiahmoo lore. Were these people a branch of the NSS-speaking group of maybe closer to Nooskack or Halkomelem speaking groups? Or?? Skookum1 ( talk) 08:51, 3 January 2014 (UTC)