We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Hospitality is the ornament, and has been the ruin, of the aborigine.
2
Fine red iron-oxide dust settled into everything They had several aborigine servants.
3
But if ever there was an astonished aborigine, Lone Wolf was the same.
4
Even a broad-nosed, foreheadless, blubber-lippedaborigine from the hill-junglesobjected to his presence!
5
Got some kind of an aborigine caged up in it.
1
He was referring, as Ty understood, to Kath Two's story about the camouflaged Indigen in the trees.
2
His accent was that of an Indigen.
3
"Did you see any Indigens?" she asked him.
4
Judging from his clothes-five-year-oldfashions from Chainhattan customized with bits of fur, bone, and animal skin-hewas an Indigen with commercial links to Qayaq.
1
Every indigene learns by hard experience to be courteous to a French soldier.
2
The apparently foreign language was a simple corruption of archaic seedship English not so far removed from the indigene argot of the plantations.
3
INDIGENES.-Theaboriginal animal or vegetable inhabitants of a country or region.
4
The incomplete word INDI does not mean INDIENS, but of course, INDIGENES, aborigines!
5
You'll freefall with skydivers, and talk to Amazon river indigenes as though you were there.
1
Its top policy priorities will be water, nativespecies and the environment.
2
Ireland has several nativespecies of carnivorous plants, growing in bog habitats.
3
Where present, P. chinensis was more abundant than all nativespecies combined.
4
Almost 4000 more nativespecies are on the brink of being lost.
5
Davis noted that in many places, non- nativespecies actually increase total biodiversity.