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Example sentences for "indigenes"

Lexicographically close words:
indifferentist; indifferentlie; indifferently; indigenas; indigence; indigenous; indigent; indigested; indigestible; indigestion
  1. No more comprehensive, sound, and critical work on the indigenes of America has ever been written.

  2. Separation of the maize-eating from the mandioca-eating indigenes of America.

  3. This fundamental difference in the food of the indigenes points to a great distinction between the peoples to which I shall have in the sequel to revert.

  4. What they have considered as promiscuity can always be included in one of these forms of marriage, even among the indigenes of Hayti, whose life is the most debauched.

  5. This is the case, for example, with the Weddas of Ceylon, the indigenes of Terra del Fuego, the aboriginal Australians, the Esquimaux and certain Indians of Brazil.

  6. Nor can it be convincingly asserted that the extra-Palaearctic Lumbricids are real indigenes of those--often tropical--countries.

  7. Whether those of North America are really indigenes or not remains perhaps a matter for discussion; but it is at least noteworthy that the vast preponderance of species occurring there are also European and even British.

  8. As the indigenes rise in the scale, have clearings and cultivate the soil, the resistance increases.

  9. The Manowolko Islands of the Malay Archipelago were without indigenes when the first settlers arrived.

  10. She saw the patrol of Tirailleurs Indigenes marching at the double to the doorway in which the Arabs were still struggling.

  11. A patrol of Tirailleurs Indigenes passed by going up the street, in yellow and blue uniforms, turbans and white gaiters, their rifles over their broad shoulders.

  12. In Venezuela the descendants of Europeans are in the minority, while in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia the indigenes make up nearly two-thirds of the inhabitants.

  13. The true indigenes of Gilolo, "Alfuros" as they are here called, live on the eastern coast, or in the interior of the northern peninsula.

  14. The people here--at least the chief men--were of a much purer Malay race than the Mahometans of the mainland of Ceram, which is perhaps due to there having been no indigenes on these small islands when the first settlers arrived.

  15. They are, no doubt, the true indigenes of this part of New Guinea, living in the interior, and subsisting by cultivation and hunting.

  16. The descriptions of these latter often agree exactly with the characters of the brown indigenes of Gilolo and Ceram.

  17. The people of Waigiou are not truly indigenes of the island, which possesses no "Alfuros," or aboriginal inhabitants.

  18. The lower class of the population consist almost entirely of the indigenes of the adjacent island.

  19. This immigration greatly alarmed the poor Indigenes who cannot easily forget how they were once treated by those not of their own race.

  20. Pederasty was also general throughout Nicaragua, and the early explorers found it amongst the indigenes of Panama.

  21. By frequent marriages, it is possible that before the end of the present generation, the race of the indigenes may be totally extinct.

  22. The conquest of the indigenes by introduced organisms shows that the indigenes were not perfectly adapted, see Origin, Ed.

  23. Now, the explanation of these facts is as follows: The indigenes of Africa are the animals of the first group.

  24. The island flora, therefore, somewhat nearly represents the Pliocene indigenes of both.

  25. Here they were well received by the indigenes of this Colombian territory.

  26. There were faces plainly European, others as unmistakably Hindoo, Indigenes of Yunnan province, Thibetans, Cantonese pedlars, and Szechuen coolies.

  27. At the mission in Tali three women are employed, and of these two are goitrous; the third, a Minchia woman, is free from the disease, and I have been told that among the indigenes the disease is much less common than among the Chinese.

  28. The indigenes of North America obviously contain a great deal of Caucasian blood, from ancient migrations coming from north-east Asia, and therefore sometimes resemble Polynesians more than they do the Mongols of northern Asia.

  29. So far then as present evidence goes, we may assert that the ornamentation of the indigenes of New Guinea is essentially composed of straight lines and angles.


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