Advertisement
Advertisement
Siouan
[ soo-uhn ]
noun
- an American Indian language family formerly widespread from Saskatchewan to the lower Mississippi, also found in the Virginia and Carolina piedmont, and including Catawba, Crow, Dakota, Hidatsa, Mandan, Osage, and Winnebago.
- a member of one of the Siouan-speaking peoples.
adjective
- of or relating to the Sioux or the Siouan languages.
Siouan
/ ˈsuːən /
noun
- a family of North American Indian languages including Sioux, probably related to Iroquoian
adjective
- of or relating to the Sioux peoples or languages
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
On September 14, 1869, Siouan warriors attempted another foray into Wind River Valley but were repulsed by troops.
He was, moreover, the first to discover that the Tutelos of Virginia belonged to the Siouan family, and to identify the Cherokee as a member of the Iroquoian family of speech.
One, a, represents clearly the elm-bark covering of the wigwams, and in this picture the arbor suggests a Siouan rather than an Ojibway encampment; b is more characteristic of the Ojibway.
At one Siouan village, "the first Puff blew down all the Palisadoes that fortified the town."
First, a growing and expounding Siouan race, pressed forward also by an expanding irresistible Algonkian stock, occupied the high plains and pushed back its peoples behind the wall of mountains.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse