User:Rob gilbert KU/sandbox

Bibliography section:

Dyk, Walter (1933). A Grammar of Wishram. New Haven, CT: dissertation from Yale University.

Moore, Robert (1988). Lexicalization versus Lexical Loss in Wasco-Wishram Language Obsolescence. International Journal of American Linguistics, Vol. 54 (No.4), 453-468.

Moore, Robert (2000). ''The people are here now: The contemporary culture of an ancestral language: Studies in obsolescent Kiksht (Wasco-Wishram dialect of Upper Chinookan). Retrieved from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. (304644029).''

Silverstein, Michael (1995). Kiksht “Impersonals” as Anaphors and the Predictiveness of Grammatical-Categorial Universals. Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, [S.l.], pp. 262-286, June 1995. ISSN 2377-1666.

Word Order section:

Word order in Kiksht depends on the usage of the verb within an entire Kiksht sentence. One verb with all of its morphological elements can represent the meaning of an entire English sentence (Moore 1988: 455). In Kiksht, there is a word order found in both a standalone, singular verb as well as the entire discourse of an entire multiple-word sentence or utterance.