| Webster's Online Dictionary |
| Part of Speech | Definition | |
| Noun | 1. The family of languages that includes Eskimo and Aleut.[Wordnet]. | |
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Source: WordNet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. |
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Date "Eskimo-Aleut" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1971. (references) |
| Expressions | Definition | ||
| Eskimo-Aleut language | The family of languages that includes Eskimo and Aleut. Source: Wordnet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. | ||
| Eskimo-Aleut languages | Eskimo-Aleut is a language family native to Greenland, the Canadian Arctic, Alaska, and parts of Siberia. It consists of the Eskimo languages, known as Inuit in the north of Alaska, Canada, and Greenland, as Yup'ik in the west of Alaska, and as Yuit in Siberia, on the one side, and the single Aleut language on the other. (references) | ||
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Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | Top | ||
Topics by Level of Interest: Eskimo-Aleut | ||||
| Topics sorted by level of Interest | Level (1=low, 600=high) | Topics sorted Alphabetically | Level (1=low, 600=high) | |
| Eskimo-Aleut languages | 8 | Eskimo-Aleut languages | 8 | |
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Source: the editor, created by/for EVE to gauge likely levels of human interest in linguistically triggered topics (compiled across various sources, such as Wikipedia and specialty expression glosses). | ||||
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