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Speaking the language of the fur trade
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- Avant
- Bowsman and lead voyageur of the canoe
- Batard Canot
- "Express canoe." 14-16 feet long. Often
used as mail carriers. Manned by 2-4 voyageurs.
- Bourgeois
- Voyageur term for the Wintering Partners or
Clerks. The word came from the French and
described a "new middle class people"
in Europe. Bourgeois were usually educated men of
various nationalities. Many were Scottish, French
or American. Clerks were almost always French
until the end when more Americans and English
held Clerk positions.
- Brigade
- Fleet of canoes.
- Canot du Maitre
- Montreal canoe. 30-40 feet long. Used to navigate
the big waters of the Great Lakes. Manned by 8
-16 voyageurs.
- Canot du Nord
- North canoe. 18-22 feet long. Used on the smaller
lakes and rivers to bring furs to Grand Portage
or Fort William. Manned by 2-6 voyageurs.
- Capote
- Hooded blanket coat.
- coureur de bois
("woods runner")
- Traders, explorers, adventurers who lived in the
North West before the trading companies or, later
independent traders who lived with the Indians.
- Engage'
- Employee of the North West Company.
- Gouvernail
- Steersman and second ranking voyageur in the
canoe.
- Hivernant
- An experienced voyageur. Older men with more
experience than the "summer men". They
were also called "Winterers" because
they spent the winter months trading with various
tribes.
- Mangeur du Lard
- A summer man, inexperienced. Also called
"pork eaters" because of their daily
allotment of pork fat (grease) mixed with pounded
corn.
- Metis
- People of mixed French Canadian and Indian
heritage.
- Milieux
- The middlemen voyageurs in the canoe.
- Pay d'en haut
- The Up Country, north and west of Lake Superior.
- Piece
- One pack of 90 pounds.
- Porkeater
- Montreal canoeman who never went beyond Rainy
Lake.
- Pose
- A rest stop along the portage trail. Usually
about ½ mile apart. Voyageurs would often be
allowed a pipe at each pose. As a result,
portages were often described by the number of
poses or pipes allowed. Grand Portage was a 16
pipe or 16 pose portage since it was just over 8
miles long.
- Rendezvous
- Annual event in mid-summer at Grand Portage and
later Fort William, where wintering traders
exchanged their furs for trading goods and
supplies brought from Montreal.
- Voyageur
- Traveler, but in the fur trade era it meant the
people employed to paddle the canoes, carry the
bundles and do most of the heavy work. Usually,
but not always, French-Canadian.
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For more information on the Ojibwe language, visit the Native Languages of the Americas web site.
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Word or Phrase |
Translation |
Word or Phrase |
Translation |
| aniin minik |
how many? |
abwi |
canoe paddle |
| agidaajiwan |
upstream |
akawaabi |
he waits for/looks
out for |
| aki |
earth/land/soil/place |
amik |
beaver |
| anishaa |
just for fun |
anishinaabe bimaa |
he lives the Indian
way |
| awenen |
who? |
baashkizigan |
gun/rifle |
| bekaa |
slow down/wait |
biiwaanag |
flint |
| endogwen |
I don't know |
eya |
yes |
| gaa mashi |
not yet |
ganabaj |
maybe/perhaps |
| gakiiwe |
portages |
gichi mookomaan |
whiteman |
| giiwedinong |
to the north |
maanoo |
nevermind |
| kookum |
grandmother |
makizin |
moccasin |
| mazina' ige |
he gives credit (trader) |
miigwech |
it is to much (thanks) |
| miijim |
food |
misawend |
desires it/wants it |
| minose |
it goes well |
mishi |
firewood |
| mishom |
grandfather |
| naangiwane |
he carries a light
load/pack |
niinawind |
we/us |
| nishkaadizi |
he is mad/angry |
onji |
why? |
| waasawad |
it is far |
wegonen |
what? |
| wii |
want to (do
something?) |
wiigawaassi-jiimaan |
birch bark canoe |
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