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This Land Is Our Land: Myths, Facts, and Mysteries Audiobook, by John Rayburn Play Audiobook Sample

This Land Is Our Land: Myths, Facts, and Mysteries Audiobook

This Land Is Our Land: Myths, Facts, and Mysteries Audiobook, by John Rayburn Play Audiobook Sample
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Read By: John Rayburn Publisher: John D. Rayburn Listen Time: at 1.0x Speed 6.33 hours at 1.5x Speed 4.75 hours at 2.0x Speed Release Date: January 2023 Format: Unabridged Audiobook ISBN: 9798212384988

Quick Stats About this Audiobook

Total Audiobook Chapters:

51

Longest Chapter Length:

27:42 minutes

Shortest Chapter Length:

01:55 minutes

Average Chapter Length:

11:07 minutes

Audiobooks by this Author:

15

Other Audiobooks Written by John Rayburn: > View All...

Publisher Description

Throughout the stories here is information on how places, cities, and states got their names.  However, questions arise because Native American tribes of the day didn’t yet have a written alphabet, and none of those came along until Sequoyah invented one in 1821, one that was actually more of a syllabary with symbols that stood for consonant/vowel sequences and could make words, basically just a writing system.

One such word example is Tsa-La-Gi in Oklahoma, a recreated Cherokee settlement showing what one was like before European contact. The name means “Cherokee,” and if you say it out phonetically as “Say-la-ghee,” it’s understandable how that was understood as the word Cherokee. It wasn’t written out because there wasn’t yet a means of doing so.

Many such words were heard by early frontiersmen, most of whom had little or no formal education. As a result, they pronounced and spelled anyway they heard various words, and because that was all that was available, their decisions held up more often not. It brings to mind an old phrase aimed at accepting something while having at least a degree of skepticism about the actual truth or meaning, and that is to “take it with a grain of salt.” This all means if you come across something here with either skepticism or at least no specific literal interpretation, don’t fret. The information is interesting, whether or not always logical or with an occasional small degree of accuracy. Don’t let any word choices by those early, often under-educated frontiersmen cause you to be “anti-semantic.” We repeat the suggestion to just go along with whatever is mentioned, but remember to have that “grain of salt” handy.

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About John Rayburn

John Rayburn is a veteran of sixty-two years in broadcasting. He served as a news and sports anchor and show host, and his television newscast achieved the largest share-of-audience figures of any major-market television newscast in the nation. He is a member of the Broadcast Pioneers Hall of Fame. His network credits include reports and/or appearances on The Today Show, Huntley-Brinkley News, Walter Cronkite News, NBC Monitor, NBC News on the Hour, and others. He recorded dozens of books for the National Library Service and narrated innumerable radio and television recordings.