Giveaways: An ABC Book of Loanwords from the Americas

by Linda Boyden

Magazine (paper), 2010

LCC

Chi PE1582 A3 B69 2010

Collection

Description

Did you know that the okra plant and the word "okra" were introduced to the Americas from Africa? Or that "squash" was first a word from the language of the Narragansett tribe of New England? According to etymologists--people who study words, languages, and word histories--many languages grow by adopting words from other languages, or loanwords. American English is a giant stew, simmering with loanwords like "okra" and "squash." In her latest book, Linda Boyden shares an alphabet list of indigenous loanwords from North, South, and Central America that have found their way into common usage either nationally or regionally. "N?n?," for example, is the Hawaiian name for a goose native to the islands and the official state bird. From "abalone" to "zopilote," Boyden celebrates the cultural diversity of American English while her brilliantly colored collage illustrations and simple, direct text reveal the flexibility and adaptability of language to young readers.… (more)

Publication

Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press (2010)

Awards

International Book Awards (Finalist — Multicultural Non-Fiction — 2011)
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