An indigenous person who was born in a particular place.
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 . - The aboriginal 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.
6 Baron Humboldt ("Unes des Cordilleres et monuments indigenes des peuples de l'Amerique", Vol.
7 The lower class of the population consist almost entirely of the indigenes of the adjacent island.
8 The American archaeologist, Mr. John D. Baldwin, is of opinion that they were the descendants of indigenes .
9 The descriptions of these latter often agree exactly with the characters of the brown indigenes of Gilolo and Ceram.
10 The people of Waigiou are not truly indigenes of the island, which possesses no "Alfuros," or aboriginal inhabitants.
11 Dominated purely by Igbo tribes, the indigenes there had been converted to Christianity, like those who had lived in Enugu.
12 Everybody seems to know everybody else among the indigenes , most of whom are members of the Chamorro race & speak Chamorro.
13 The Aborigines, dancing a corroborree or swimming in the Derwent, imply that this extends to the protection of the colonial indigenes .
14 -Itsuse from the earliest times in America.-Separationof the maize-eating from the mandioca-eating indigenes of America.
15 They are, no doubt, the true indigenes of this part of New Guinea, living in the interior, and subsisting by cultivation and hunting.
16 The New Yorker, January 25, 1993 P. 76 If only the simple indigenes of the place disported View Article
Другие примеры для термина "indigene"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Translations for indigene