Misplaced Pages

Duckabush River

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Duckabush River is located in the Olympic Peninsula in Washington , United States. It rises near Mount Duckabush and Mount Steel in the Olympic Mountains within the Olympic National Park and drains to Hood Canal , an arm of Puget Sound .

#24975

3-489: The name "Duckabush" comes from the Twana placename /dəxʷyabús/, meaning "place of the crooked-jaw salmon". This Jefferson County, Washington state location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article related to a river in the state of Washington is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Twana language The Twana ( tuwaduq ) language, also known as Skokomish ,

6-734: Is a Coast Salish language of the Salishan language family, spoken by the Twana , the Indigenous people of Hood Canal , in Washington . The name "Skokomish" is an Anglicization of the Twana word squqəʔbəš and means "river people" or "people of the river". It is believed by some elders within the Skokomish community (such as Bruce Subiyay Miller ) that the language branched off from Lushootseed (a neighboring related Coast Salish language) because of

9-494: The region-wide tradition of not speaking the name of someone who died for a year after their death. Substitute words were found in their place and often became normalizing in the community, generating differences from one community to the next. Subiyay speculated that this process increased the drift rate between languages and separated Twana firmly from Lushootseed . The last fluent speaker died in 1980. The Skokomish Indian Tribe released an online Twana dictionary in 2020, and

#24975