Mo‧hawk /ˈməʊhɔːk/ noun 1 → the Mohawk2 [countable] a member of this tribe→ see Cultural Note at native american3 [countable] American English a Mohican hairstyle—Mohawk adjective a Mohawk chiefExercises More results Mohawk the Mohawk See all results Pictures of the ...
name of a North American native people of upper New York and adjacent Canada, and their (Iroquoian) language, 1630s,Mohowawogs(plural), which is said to derive from a word in a southern New England Algonquian tongue meaning "they eat living things," perhaps a reference to cannibalism. Comp...
The sheer joy when she wakes up in the morning to go to Mohawk and when she gets home and tells us about her day is really all you want as a parent. We love Mohawk so much that we have rearranged our vacation schedule for 2020 so both of our kids can go to all 8 weeks of camp...
Deep concerns for the connection of indigenous language to cultural meaning-making and values are expressed by both indigenous community members and non-indigenous sojourners in these indigenous worlds. The theme of change, both distressing language loss and creative language evolution, is stressed鈥攅...
aI wrote the diary also have no other meaning, I miss it, so you don't have to feel what, really, and I also hope you happy, not only will you English oh oh, I have learned, now every day at home with my nephew to chat in English. 我没有写日志也有其他意思,我错过它,因此您不...
- Name meaning: Presumably, it means “all powerful.” - Reason for ban: Children can’t have more than two names. The local government in Sonora, Mexico, prevents children from being registered with names that might be construed as derogatory, pejorative, discriminatory, or devoid of meaning...
On the absence of certain quantifiers in Mohawk - Baker - 1995 () Citation Context ...languages the decomposition analysis must be possible, and might be the only possible one. Mohawk seems to have a word, yahuhka, that has the generalized quantifier meaning also attributed to nobody (=-=...