The Iñupiat (or Inupiaq) are an Inuit, Alaska Native people, whose traditional territory spans Norton Sound on the Bering Sea to the Canadian border. Their current communities include seven Alaskan villages in the North Slope Borough, affiliated with the Arctic Slope Regional Corporation; eleven villages in Northwest Arctic Borough; and sixteen villages affiliated with the Bering Straits Regional Corporation.
Culturally, Iñupiat are divided into two regional hunter-gatherer groups: the Taġiuġmiut (formerly Tareumiut) ("sea people"), living on or near the north Alaska coast, and the Nunamiut ("land people"), living in interior Alaska.
Iñupiat (/i-ˈnü-pē-ˌät/ or /i-ˈnyü-pē-ˌät/), formerly Inyupik, is the plural form of the name for the people, and the name of their language; Iñupiaq (/i-ˈnü-pē-äk/) is the singular form (also sometimes refers to the language), and Iñupiak (/i-ˈnü-pē-ɑːk/) is the dual form; the root words are iñuk 'person' - and -piaq 'real', i.e. the combined meaning of the self-referential is 'real people'.
Beautiful to Me
Verse 1
From time to time I think I must be going Blind.
Cos I was searching but I never thought to find.
but when I look at you (x2)
Chorus
You are so beautiful, beautiful to me. (x2)
Verse 2
When I was young I never needd anyone, needed anyone.
When I look back I smile at how far I have come, how far
I have come.(br> And when I look at you (x2)
Repeat Chorus.
It's easy to see, I'm falling in love with you.
It's just you and me. We're falling in love.
But I don't let it get me down cos I got my feet on the
ground.
And when I look at you (I'm falling in love). (x2) And
when I look at you, oh, (then Chorus again).