A few are educated and have risen to good positions in Government service.
They are placed standing at a little distance with a screen between them, and liquor is spilt on the ground to make a line from one to the other.
After the last jump they go a little way off, throw aside their wet clothes, and then run naked to a place where their dry clothes are kept; they put them on and go home without looking back.
Certainly they must have exceeded the two preceding subtribes and an estimate of 600 should not be too much.
Although Alexander Taylor, in his Indianology, mentions some of the subtribes of the Wappo, he gives no useful population data.
This is somewhat but not materially greater than the mean number for the 22 subtribes of the Wailaki according to Goddard's data.
Of the eight subtribes the most numerous and most important were the Ukomnom, who inhabited most of Round Valley.
Indirect confirmation of this conclusion comes from comparison of the Huchnom village distribution with that of the subtribes of the Yuki proper.
For the first 11 subtribes Merriam gives a total of 46 villages.
Stewart designates its occupants the Bokaya and includes three subtribes centering in the villages of Kauca, Pdahau, and Lacupda.
This would mean an average of 402 persons for the threesubtribes or villages just mentioned, Levantoyome, Gualomi, and Chichiyome.
No evidence is offered by either author to the effect that the remaining 5 subtribes differed in any essential way from the first 13.
For the other five subtribes we have very little direct information.
The Yunisumenes, Cosomes, and Ilamenes are, of course, precisely the three subtribes discussed in the preceding paragraph.
In view of the paucity of the village data for all subtribes except the North Fork group it is proper to fall back on area-density comparisons.
The total for these three of Kroeber's subtribes would then be 1,064.
The other subtribes of the Mono provide no data comparable with those available for the North Fork group.
I can say but little about the two subtribes of the Aggomiut (the Tununirmiut and the Tununirusirmiut), as the reports are scanty and the chart of the region is too incorrect to convey any exact information.
Among the subtribes of the Oqomiut the Saumingmiut are most nearly related to the Padlimiut and extend their migrations farthest to the north.
The Machigangas are one of the subtribes of the Campas Indians, one of the most numerous groups in the Amazon Valley.
Among them three subtribesare still hostile to the whites: the Cashibos, the Chonta Campas, and the Campas Bravos.
The Delawares proper were organized into three divisions, which, according to Brinton, were subtribes and not clans, although each of the three had a totemic animal by whose name it was commonly known.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "subtribes" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.