Perhaps not some much in Lawton during his early childhood, but his parents both taught in the New Mexico Indian School system as employees of the Bureau of Indian Affairs that he attended. He would have been exposed at home to at least some of the Kiowa language, but in New Mexico it was more likely the Dine (Navajo) and T'inde (Apache) languages. He lived on two Apache Reservations and at the Jemez Pueblo and attended four different High Schools. To quote him, "...many times I was the only person for whom Englsh was a first language. I was in school with a lot of Pueblo kids, and Navajo kids. They spoke a kind of broken Engllish, and I didn't. I suppose that was to my advantage in some ways, but a disadvantage in others."
N. Scott Momaday writes and speaks as an American Indian Storyteller, but he has a superb command of the English Language.
Apexvs. Kiowa and English.
Kiowa and English.
The primary language spoken in N. Scott Momaday's house when he was a child in Oklahoma was Kiowa, which is a Native American language. Momaday's immersion in the Kiowa language and culture had a significant impact on his writing and identity as a Native American author.
N Scott Momaday was born in Lawton, Oklahoma. His family later moved to New Mexico and Arizona to live on the Navajo, Apache, and Pueblo reservations, where his parents taught school. As a child growing up among various Indian tribes in Arizona and New Mexico, N Scott Momaday developed an appreciation for the healing power of stories and their words.N Scott Momaday is enrolled in the Kiowa Tribe of Oklahomaand also has Cherokee ancestry from his mother, writer Natachee Scott Momaday.
He grew up with English as a first language but was also exposed to Kiowa.
it was like a child like persoality
Joseph T. Lawton has written: 'Introduction to child development' -- subject(s): Child development 'Introduction to child care and early childhood education' -- subject(s): Child care services, Child development, History, Preschool Education
When the child is 18.
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A child is no longer considered a minor in Oklahoma once they turn 18 years old.
No. In Oklahoma, you are still considered a child until your 18th birthday.
When the child is 18.