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Algonkin

[ al-gong-kin ]

noun

, plural Al·gon·kins, (especially collectively) Al·gon·kin.


adjective

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Example Sentences

The great Algonkin sun and earth myth which has many variants and vast wealth of detail, describes those relations more profoundly and broadly than any other Indian myth devoted to the same subject.

When first known to the French, were living on the south side of Lake Ontario, and engaged in a fierce war with their Algonkin neighbors.

All the others were of the Algonkin group, just as the French, the Spanish, and the Italians belong to what is called the Latin family, and speak languages which have the same origin.

Indians of the Algonkin tribe named this tree family, and taught the early colonists in Virginia to use for food the ripe nuts of the shagbark and mockernut.

The Jesuits' Relations state positively that there was "no one immaterial God recognised by the Algonkin tribes, and that the title 'The Great Manito' was introduced first by themselves in its personal sense."

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AlgonkianAlgonquian