Paleo-Eskimo
English
Alternative forms
- Palaeo-Eskimo, Palaeoeskimo
- Paleoeskimo
less-common alternative forms
- Palae-Eskimo (uncommon, dated)
- Palaeeskimo (rare)
- Palæ-Eskimo, Palæeskimo (rare; archaic or used by non-native speakers)
Etymology
paleo- (“old, primeval”) + Eskimo. The scholar David J. Meltzer writes that the people are "badly named: there is nothing to indicate they are ancestral Eskimo or spoke an Eskimo language; today's Eskimo refer to them as the Tuniit".[1]
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ˌpeɪlioʊˈɛskɪmoʊ/
Noun
Paleo-Eskimo pl (plural only)
- The inhabitants and/or native cultures of the North American Arctic region before the rise of the modern Eskimo cultures in the region; the Saqqaq, Independence I and II, and/or Dorset cultures and peoples.
See also
- Neoeskimo
- Paleo-Eskimo on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
References
- First Peoples in a New World: Colonizing Ice Age America →ISBN, 2009), page 214
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