http://game-of-you.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] game-of-you.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2006-03-25 09:32 am
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Detention, Saturday, 3/25, 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m.

Dream appears bored and a little contemptuous of the four teenagers who file into the Danger Room for detention. Half the room is set up as a conventional classroom; the other half holds four military-style cots. A table in the classroom half holds some food for later.

Dream inclines his head in a nod of greeting. "Hello. You are in my care for the duration of the day. I promise I will not harm you, permanently."

It might be that he gives slightly more significant glances to Marty and Angel, who both served detention under him several months before. He might also give Angel a look that could say, I have not forgotten what we talked about.

Or it might all just be a trick of the light, and he may give no student any particular attention.

The list of names on the board is:
Angel
Martin Blank
Logan Echolls
Isabel Evans



[OOC: I will be on SP after 1 p.m. Drop an email if you need me, if I'm not on IM.]

Re: Activity two, detention, 3/25

[identity profile] izzyalienqueen.livejournal.com 2006-03-25 09:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Navajo (also Navaho) (in Navajo: Diné bizaad) is an Athabaskan language (of Na-Dené stock) spoken in the southwest United States by the Navajo people (Diné). It is geographically and linguistically one of the Southern Athabaskan languages (the majority of Athabaskan languages are spoken in northwest Canada and Alaska).

Navajo claims more speakers than any other Native American or First Nation language north of the US-Mexico border, with more than 100,000 native speakers, and this number is actually increasing with time. During World War II, a code based on Navajo was used by code talkers to send secure military messages over radio.

The Navajo language is still widely spoken by Navajos of all ages, with over half of the Navajo population speaking the Navajo language at home. Many parents still pass on the Navajo language to their children as a first language. The Navajo people are one of the very few Native American tribes that still use the native language of their tribe in everyday usage. However, the language is still moderately endangered, especially in urban areas outside of reservations, as more and more younger Navajos start to shift to the English language.