These six persons belonged to a long lineage, reaching back to the early colonists, and had intermarried so slightly with the emigrant population of the Old World that they may be called a strictly American family.
They became Christians, intermarried with the natives, and settled down to industry and commerce like the rest of the people; and there are many of their descendants to this day in various parts of Ireland.
They intermarried in the mean while with the native Irish.
Gradually they had settled down on the land, intermarried with the Angles and Saxons, and colonized all England north and east of Watling Street (a rough line from London to Chester), and the eastern lowlands of Scotland likewise.
The Brazilians of the interior were almost altogether the descendants of criminal Portuguese, who had been exiled to the country, and intermarried with the lowest possible class of African slaves.
This seems a less feasible explanation; it is more probable that the Norse settlers intermarried with the Eskimo and were gradually absorbed.
They have largely intermarried with Kaffir and Bechuana tribes.
The great majority of the peers have sprung from, and all have intermarried with, the Commons; and the peerage has been from the first, and has become more and more as centuries have rolled on, the prize of success in life.
The form of marriage which they found created a punaluan group, in which the husbands and wives were jointly intermarried in the group.
When the gens came into existence brothers were intermarried to each other's wives in a group, and sisters to each other's husbands in a group, to which the gens interposed no obstacle.
The system treats all brothers as the husbands of each other's wives, and all sisters as the wives of each other's husbands, and as intermarried in a group.
The Russian families, thus established in China, having intermarried with the natives, have since quitted the Christian religion, but their church still subsists.
It will be seen, further on, that these two families intermarried again; and that the house of Kimberley now represents that of Killigrew.
When she said almost, she meant that they had intermarriedwith the same families--the Yorkes, the Endsleighs and the Poles.
In fact, her own family, the Colfaxes, had almost intermarriedwith them.
It is probable that these subcastes immigrated with the Malwa Rajas in the fifteenth century, the Dholewars being the earlier arrivals, and having from the first intermarried with the local Dravidian tribes.
Olaus Rudbeck adds, that their ancestors were persuaded that Heaven intermarried with the Earth, and thus uniting his forces with hers, produced animals and plants.
A certain number of families, including most of the aristocracy, have remained pure white; but many more intermarried with the natives, and the peasants of to-day belong to this mixed race.
The settlers both in Sao Paulo and along the northeastern coast, while they killed most of the Indian men either in fight or by working them to death as slaves, intermarried freely with Indian women.
Thomas was very possibly descended from the ancient family of that name which intermarried with the Clares, Staffords, and Greys.
The Ratcliffes, in addition to the alliance with Sidney, intermarried with the Staffords and Stanleys.
My mother was named Mary Keith, she was the daughter of a clergyman, of the name of Keith, who migrated from Scotland and intermarried with a Miss Randolph of James River" is Marshall's comment on his maternal ancestry.
The Ainus have remained distinct; where they have intermarried with the Japanese, the half breeds have died out in the second or third generation.
He claimed that the descendants (called Eurasians) of Chinese who had intermarried with Europeans were brighter than the average children of either race.
Several Hidatsa lodges (round), the occupants of which had intermarriedwith the Dakotas.
But as the group became broken up owing to the influx of the Malays, andintermarried with foreign and weakened folk, the patterns fell through and sub-divisions arose.
The Ainu of this bay are poor specimens of their race, as most of them have intermarried with Japanese.
Besides, most of them have intermarried with Japanese, and have consequently adopted many Japanese customs and manners.
Pioneer and Indian built their cabins and tilled their fields side by side, ranged the woods together, knelt before the same altar and frequently intermarried on terms of equality, so far as race was concerned.
Licensed British traders were resident in every tribe and many had intermarried and raised families among them, while the border man looked upon the Indian only as a cumberer of the earth.
This tribe is intermarried with the Utes, and has always been on friendly terms with them.
They have intermarried to a great extent with the whites, some of the following portraits being of subjects having a large proportion of white blood in their veins.
The Chippewas are extensively intermarried with the Ottawas, and are thrifty and worthy citizens of the United States, as are also those of Saginaw, and of Keewenaw Bay in Michigan.
A small band of Indians living in the southern portion of California, who are extensively intermarried with the Mexicans.
A large number of Ottawas are now living on the shore of Lake Superior, so intermarried and confederated with the Chippewas that there is no attempt at any distinction between them, the two combined numbering over 6,000.
Why, sir, I heard this morning, from one pastor only, of two or three of his members thus intermarried in the South.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "intermarried" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.