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Home > Edward Sapir


Edward Sapir (pronunciation: suh PEER), ( 1884- 1939) was an American anthropologist- linguist, a leader in

American structural linguistics , and one of the creators of what is now called the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis. He was born in Lauenburg, Germany. He was the pupil of Franz Boas, teacher of Benjamin Whorf.

He taught at the university of Chicago and later at the university of Yale. He was one of the first who explored the relations between language studies and anthropology.

Sapir proposed an alternative view of language in 1921, asserting that language influences the ways in which people think. Sapir's idea was adopted and developed during the 1940s by Whorf and eventually became the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis.

Among the languages and cultures studied by Sapir are several

AthabaskanAthabascan or Athapascan or Athapaskan or Athabaskan is the name of a Native American people, also known as the Athabasca Indians or Athapaskes and of their language family. Eyak and Athabaskan form a language group called Eyak-Athabascan. Tlingit is said languages, ChinookChinook has several meanings: The Chinookan nation of Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest, which inhabited the lower Columbia River valley in what is now Washington, Oregon, and British Columbia. Chinook comprise the Clatsop, Cathlamet, Multnomah, W, NavajoNavajo is an Apachean language of the Athapaskan language family, belonging to the Na-Dene phylum. It is like the other Apachean languages in that although the majority of the languages in the Na-Dene family are spoken much farther north ( Alaska, Yukon,, NootkaThe Nootka or Nuu-Chah-Nulth people are are indigenous peoples of Canada. The group ia a First Nations whose traditional home is in the Pacific Northwest on the west coast of Vancouver Island. The Nootka are related to the Chinook and Kwakiutl peoples, an, PaiutePaiute (sometimes written as Piute) refers to two related groups Northern Paiute and Southern Paiute--of Native North Americans speaking languages belonging to the Numic branch of the Uto-Aztecan family of Native American languages. The name the Paiute us, Takelma, Wishram , and YanaFor the Native American Yana tribe see Yana (native American tribe). Yana is a Sanskrit word meaning vehicle which represents an augmentation to the analogy of the spiritual path, to include the idea of various vehicles that can take the practitioner alon.

1 Books

2 Essays and articles

3 External links


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