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Example sentences for "ethnological"

Lexicographically close words:
ethnographic; ethnographical; ethnographiques; ethnography; ethnologic; ethnologically; ethnologischen; ethnologist; ethnologists; ethos
  1. Hill Tout, "Ethnological Report on the Stseelis and Skaulits Tribes of the Halokmelem Division of the Salish of British Columbia," Journal of the Anthropological Institute, xxxiv.

  2. Hutchinson, "On the Chaco and other Indians of South America," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.

  3. Forbes, "On the Aymara Indians of Bolivia and Peru," Journal of the Ethnological Society of London, ii.

  4. But if so, why should he combine a historical and ethnological name Phrygia with an official name Galatia in the same breath, when the two are different in kind and cannot be mutually exclusive?

  5. Let us not tire of intercession on behalf of the ancient people of the Covenant, of Israel.

  6. He and those who were thinking and acting like him were now unable to speak, to write, to telephone, or to do anything whatsoever.

  7. I know, Boris, that from heaven God will keep watch over your actions.

  8. It is a deliberate policy of extermination directed against, not a nation, but a whole race.

  9. We urge that all plans for reconstruction in Europe shall include measures designed to secure full justice for the Jews and a safe and respected place for them in western civilisation.

  10. Children that die on the way are cast out from the open trucks to the side of the railway.

  11. Let us all in this awful and creative hour march resolutely forward, not faithless nor fearful, but confident in the future when democracy and brotherhood are one.

  12. The United Church of Christ issued the following statement in 1940: "One of the most disturbing currents in America to-day is anti-Semitism.

  13. The present work claims no higher rank than that of a humble offering to the Ethnological studies of our country.

  14. Imperceptibly the agitators had grouped themselves into two classes, economic and ethnological anti-Semites.

  15. The ethnological origin of Lot, on the contrary, can be maintained with the more assurance since we meet with the adjective “Lotan,” derived from Lot as the name of an Edomite clan in Genesis xxxvi.

  16. A writer who, as in this case, wishes to point out to his fellow tribesmen the tracts of country they are to subdue, concerns himself rather with states and political units than with ethnological problems.

  17. The scarcity of the records deprives us of any clear light on the ancient ethnological relations.

  18. But if languages may be thus transferred from one stock to another, without any corresponding intermixture of blood, what ethnological value has philology?

  19. Pouchet have recently treated of ethnological questions from this point of view.

  20. What, then, is the value of the ethnological difference between the Englishman of the western half of England and the Irishman of the eastern half of Ireland?

  21. Ethnological race and phonological race are not commensurate, except in ante-historical times, or perhaps at the very dawn of history.

  22. The contrary assumption, that language is a test of race, has introduced the utmost confusion into ethnological speculation, and has nowhere worked greater scientific and practical mischief than in the ethnology of the British Islands.

  23. To sum up our knowledge of the ethnological past of man: so far as the light is bright, it shows him substantially as he is now; and, when it grows dim, it permits us to see no sign that he was other than he is now.

  24. Galschet, The Karankawa Indians, the Coast People of Texas (Archaeological and Ethnological Papers of the Peabody Museum, Harvard University, vol.

  25. Forbes, in Journal of the Ethnological Society of London, ii.

  26. Francis Galton, "Domestication of Animals," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.

  27. Stanbridge, "On the Aborigines of Victoria," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.

  28. Hutchinson, "The Chaco Indians," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.

  29. Cullen, "The Darien Indians," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.

  30. Whymper, "The Natives of the Youkon River," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.

  31. Oldfield, "The Aborigines of Australia," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.

  32. Wilson, "Report on the Indian Tribes," Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London, N.

  33. It is a great pity that Schoolcraft, with his valuable opportunities for ethnological research, should not have added a critical attitude and a habit of accuracy to his great industry.

  34. This absurd procedure, which has made so many documents of travellers valueless for scientific purposes, is like filling an ethnological museum with pictures of Australians, Africans, etc.

  35. Here the ethnological conditions are people were the Hova, a Malayo-Indonesian people who must have come from the Malay Peninsula or the adjacent islands.

  36. For ethnological purposes three principal zones may be distinguished; the first two are respectively a large region of steppes and desert in the north, and a smaller region of steppes and desert in the south.

  37. Fletcher, Francis la Flesche and John Comfort Fillmore, "A Study of Omaha Indian Music," Peabody Museum Archaeological and Ethnological Papers.

  38. Defn: In an ethnological manner; by ethnological classification; as, one belonging ethnologically to an African race.

  39. As a scholar with philosophical and ethnological leanings, however, he deplores it, and hopes that Priber's valuable manuscripts may "escape the despoiling hands of military power.

  40. There was a principle of nationality in the ethnological character of the movement, which is the source of the common observation that revolution is more frequent in Catholic than in Protestant countries.

  41. Under Belgian administration much ethnological work has been undertaken, and published in the Annales du Musee du Congo, notably the magnificent monograph on the Bushongo (Bakuba) by E.

  42. The ethnological history of the whole of the Melanesian region is obscure, but as the result of recent investigations certain broad features may be recognised.

  43. Powell's remark that the natural history of early man becomes more and more a geological, and not merely an ethnological problem[63].

  44. Among the ethnological problems of Africa may be reckoned the Vaalpens and the Strandloopers.

  45. The local reports or traditions of primitive peoples, either extinct or still surviving in the interior, belong rather to the sphere of Malagasy folklore than to that of ethnological research.

  46. Yet so marked is the difference between the two groups, and such is the tenacity with which each clings to its proper domain, that, despite any very distinct geographical frontiers, the ethnological parting line may still be detected.

  47. They occupy all the cultivated western lowlands, which from the ethnological standpoint may be regarded as a seaward outpost of the Chinese mainland.

  48. Peisker's description of the Scythian invasions of Irania[678] may be taken as typical of the whole area, and explains the complexity of the ethnological problems.

  49. Einar thereupon killed Halfdan, and he and his men raised a mound of stones and gravel over the corpse; which mound, if not yet opened, will no doubt disclose to some modern craniologist the exact ethnological status of this semi-Finn.

  50. But this excessive hairiness of skin was one of the most marked characteristics of the Pechts, and forms indeed one of the most distinct clues to their ethnological position.

  51. But perhaps the readiest and surest way of obtaining something like a true conception of these legendary Feens, is to regard them from the ethnological point of view, as well, that is, as our imperfect information will allow.

  52. Wherever the test of linguistic evidence, the best of all proofs in ethnological questions, can be applied to his statements relative to the origin and connection of the tribes, they are invariably confirmed.

  53. Unfortunately the correctness of ethnological observations, and especially their interpretation, still leave much to be desired.

  54. A Penitential Rite of the Ancient Mexicans, Archæological and Ethnological Papers of the Peabody Museum, Harvard University (Cambridge, Mass.

  55. The most useful principle of tabulation, perhaps, would be an arrangement according to motifs, under which geographical or ethnological and geographical relations might be noted.

  56. As it is based on geographical relations, it does not in all particulars accord with modern ethnological schemes, but it is a noteworthy attempt to embrace the whole world in a family picture.

  57. But from what I have read in The Arabian Nights and elsewhere, it seems to me that Burton's researches in this direction were rather of an ethnological and historical character than a medical or scientific one.

  58. For a man, especially a young soldier whose work is not generally supposed to lie in the direction of scientific and ethnological investigation, to undertake such inquiries was to lay himself open to unpleasant imputations.

  59. Nor are they called upon to consider its ethnological aspect.

  60. Hygienic and ethnological conditions of the German Empire.

  61. This is Chester Rand, the young artist who is illustrating my ethnological work, brother Nugent," said Prof.

  62. I am writing an ethnological work, and it will need to be illustrated.

  63. There are, however, two portions of the present political state that showed much cultural distinctness in times of native life and that must usually be kept apart in all matters of ethnological and religious consideration.

  64. Much of the material on which the statements in the preceding essay are based is information collected by the University of California's Ethnological and Archaeological Survey of California since 1901 and as yet unpublished.

  65. It will be asked, of what use can all this be to ordinary photographers, even granting that it may be of scientific value in ethnological research, in inquiries into the physiognomy of disease, and for other special purposes?

  66. This copy is in the possession of The Ethnological Survey.

  67. Yet it must be admitted that as descriptions of tribal customs and as store-houses of tradition and folk-lore the ethnological sections of the Annals are by no means to be despised.


  68. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "ethnological" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.