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teleut-filchenko-0429
Object Type: Folder
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Endangered Languages Archive
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teleut-filchenko-0429
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Teleut traditional weddings in olden times and nowadays
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Teleuty 2017
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The house Teleut built
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The speaker briefly talk about Teleut decoration pattern “aychiq”
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The speaker is having lunch, treating the collector and talking freely about Teleut traditions.
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The speaker is talking about calendar Teleut holidays and respective dishes of festive cuisine.
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The speaker is talking about the Teleut language and its importance.
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The speaker shares her memories about the collector’s father Mikhail Tokmashev
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The speaker sings a song devoted to the Great Patriotic War and the Teleuts who took part in it.
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The speaker sings a traditional Teleut song.
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The speaker sings out traditional Russian rhymed short lyrics called chastushka translated into Teleut. They are mostly reflections of love affairs or social issues in the community.
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The speaker talks about her household. She describes her house and tells how she got it to be built after she moved to Gorno-Altaysk from Kemerovo region. She also talks about her day-to-day routines like setting the fire to keep the house warm, taking out the ashes, dealing with the vegetable garden.
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The speaker talks about traditional Teleut attires and their meaning for Teleut culture.
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The speaker talks about traditional Teleut holidays in different villages and rites specific to them.
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The speaker tells about Teleut clothes
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The speaker Zoya Mazhina reads aloud the printed version of Teleut fairy tale
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The speaker Zoya Mazhina reads aloud the printed version of Teleut fairy tale
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The speaker Zoya Mazhina tells how she went to Moscow for the Indigenous peoples’ festival.
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The speakers discuss the festival and the prospects of reviving national culture and traditions
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The speakers freely talk about their relatives.
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The speakers talk about inherited language memory and discuss it with the collector
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The speakers Valentina Cheshtanova and Alexandra Tydykova talk freely about the everyday use of Teleut and its importance.
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The speakers Valentina Cheshtanova and Alexandra Tydykova talk freely to the collector while having lunch.
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The speakers Valentina Cheshtanova remembers a Teleut fairy-tale “Tarmuuzhak” (literally “Little Pitchfork”) which is the name of a protagonist.
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The speakers Valentina Cheshtanova sings fragments of two Teleut songs and remembers the Teleut folklore singing band where she used to sing and then speaks of her brother Vasiliy.
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