Kwe' (greetings).
The Mi'kmaq tribe *is* a tribe of approximately 40,000 people living mostly in some New England states, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, New Brunswick, and Quebec. Approximately 1 in 4 of them still speak their native language, the Mi'kmaw language. The language has 11 consonants, 5 long vowels, 5 short vowels, and a schwa.
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Micmac or Mi'kmaq is the name of a tribe of first nations people living along the east coast of Canada. The word Mi'kmaq means allies as although the tribes are separate they come together regularly to make important decisions to which all are bound. The area's they hold as territorial lands are in Nova Scotia, the Gaspé Peninsula of Quebec, Prince Edward Island, and eastern New Brunswick. A band of Micmac also occupy southwestern Newfoundland and northern Maine in the USA.
The Mi'kmaq were and are the dominant tribe in the Canadian Maritimes, in many ways other than language, they were similar to the Maliseet of New Brunswick and the Abenaki of northern New England. The main difference in lifestyle from that of the Abenaki was that the Abenaki were able to place greater emphasis on agricultural methods because of their more southerly location. Because the Mi'kmaq language contains some characteristics of the Cree peoples, many believe that they moved to the Canadian east coast from the north. When (and if) this migration happened is uncertain, but it is known that the Mi'kmaq have occupied their homelands for a considerable period well before 1500's. The Mi'kmaq did very little farming. They were, however, skilled hunter-gatherers with a heavy emphasis on fishing and sea mammals. For this reason, the Mi'kmaq were famous for their skill with a canoe. Constructed from birch bark, their distinctive humped-back design was not only light, but capable of crossing open water. Sails were added to some of these craft during the 1600s after the Europeans arrived.
The tribe are mostly found in the East arctic and Atlantic seaboard of Canada. Newfoundland and north east Maine.
Mi'kmaq territories are in the Canadian maritimes or east coast including Nova Scotia, along the Gaspé Peninsula in Quebec, Prince Edward Island, and the eastern half of New Brunswick. They also occupy areas of southwestern Newfoundland and Northern Maine of the U.S.A. Canada has about 28 separate groups and a population of more than 1600 registered Mi'kmaq.
Micmac means a member of an American Indian people or the Algonquian language of the Micmac.
what do the micmac play
Yes, they did!
Laurie Lacey has written: 'Micmac Indian medicine' -- subject(s): Medicine, Micmac Indians
You go to the general clans page from the clan castle, then press search clans
yes they did
Paqtism < wolf>
50
In real life the Taira and the Minamoto clans were the two strongest clans of the 4. The other two were the Tachibana clans and the Fujiwara clans.
Albert D. DeBlois has written: 'Micmac lexicon' -- subject(s): Micmac language, Dictionaries, English
Basically yes. The languages are similar but more associated with the languages of the Montagnais and Cree in Quebec. The dialect of the Restigouche Micmac in Quebec differs enough from the Micmac of Nova Scotia that they have some difficulty in understanding each other.
In real life the Taira and the Minamoto clans were the two strongest clans of the 4. The other two were the Tachibana clans and the Fujiwara clans.