Quiripi is the name of a Native American language (also known as the Proto Eastern Algonquian – Archaic R-Dialect), spoken by the Quinnipiac - the indigenous people of southwestern Connecticut. One of the earliest Quiripi vocabularies was compiled by Rev. Abraham Pierson in 1658, during his ministry at Branford, Connecticut. His work consisted of a 67-page bi-lingual collection of indigenous words. In 1997, Blair A. Rudes identified the dialect as Wampano (Quiripi).

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  • Quiripi is the name of a Native American language (also known as the Proto Eastern Algonquian – Archaic R-Dialect), spoken by the Quinnipiac - the indigenous people of southwestern Connecticut. One of the earliest Quiripi vocabularies was compiled by Rev. Abraham Pierson in 1658, during his ministry at Branford, Connecticut. His work consisted of a 67-page bi-lingual collection of indigenous words. In 1997, Blair A. Rudes identified the dialect as Wampano (Quiripi). He recognized that the language had been spoken by indigenous people all “[a]long Long Island Sound … from the Connecticut River … to at least as far as Norwalk … possibly up to the Hudson in the west, and included a portion of land in present-day New York State … [as well as] south central and western Long Island. ” Quiripi/Wampano words have been preserved through deeds and place names and through individual efforts. In 1791, President Thomas Jefferson preserved a 202-word vocabulary from Long Island. Three early hymns written circa 1740 in the r-dialect have been translated by Carl Masthay. In 1787, Ezra Stiles recorded a 44-word Quinnipiac word list from a woman named Sarah Maweeh (Mauwee) at Nau-ka-tungk (Naugatuck), who was born at East Haven, Connecticut.
  • Le quiripi (ou wampano) est une langue algonquienne de la branche orientale, maintenant éteinte et qui était parlée jusqu'au XIX siècle, aux États-Unis, sur l'île de Long Island et dans une région délimitée par les fleuve Hudson à l'Ouest, et Connecticut à l'Est. Le quiripi était la langue d'un ensemble de tribus algonquiennes, parmi lesquelles les Massapequas, les Ungachogs, les Quinnipiacs, les Paugussets.
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  • American
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  • qyp
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  • Quiripi
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  • extinct
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  • Quiripi is the name of a Native American language (also known as the Proto Eastern Algonquian – Archaic R-Dialect), spoken by the Quinnipiac - the indigenous people of southwestern Connecticut. One of the earliest Quiripi vocabularies was compiled by Rev. Abraham Pierson in 1658, during his ministry at Branford, Connecticut. His work consisted of a 67-page bi-lingual collection of indigenous words. In 1997, Blair A. Rudes identified the dialect as Wampano (Quiripi).
  • Le quiripi (ou wampano) est une langue algonquienne de la branche orientale, maintenant éteinte et qui était parlée jusqu'au XIX siècle, aux États-Unis, sur l'île de Long Island et dans une région délimitée par les fleuve Hudson à l'Ouest, et Connecticut à l'Est. Le quiripi était la langue d'un ensemble de tribus algonquiennes, parmi lesquelles les Massapequas, les Ungachogs, les Quinnipiacs, les Paugussets.
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  • Quiripi language
  • Quiripi
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  • Quiripi
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