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.