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单词 Caddoan
释义

Definition of Caddoan in English:

Caddoan

adjectiveˈkadəʊənˈkadōən
  • Relating to or denoting a group of North American peoples formerly inhabiting the Midwest, or their languages, now all virtually extinct.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • If such a network existed, we would expect the pattern to more closely resemble that recorded for the Caddoan region.
    • Late Caddo period ceramic mortuary assemblages also differ considerably from region to region within the Caddoan area in the composition of jars, bottles, bowls, and carinated bowls.
    • They conducted Xray diffraction and petrographic analysis of thin sections from a vessel suspected to have originated in the Caddoan region.
    • This provenance pattern is significantly different from that found in the Caddoan mound sites and also diverges from the pattern we would expect if flint clay objects were circulated within a UMRV elite prestige-goods network.
    • The Caddoan language family includes the Caddo, Wichita, Pawnee, and Arikara languages, which are found on the central Plains.
    • The marked difference in the distribution and context of flint clay figures between the UMRV and the Caddoan region points to very different relationships between those two areas and Cahokia.
    • Custis was free to observe Creek ceremonies and Caddoan customs and skills (their talents with the bow put him in mind of stories from the Iliad) and to post a twenty-six-specimen botanical collection downriver.
    • Thus the Mississippian embraces a wide range of essentially localized groups: the Middle Mississippian, Fort Ancient, South Appalachian Mississippian, Plaquemine Mississippian, Caddoan Mississippian, and the Oneota.
    • The paste composition relationships of different Caddoan vessel forms and the conclusions of both the petrographic and neutron activation analyses indicate that the Mockingbird ceramics are the product of a local group.
    • No other contemporaneous mortuary vessel assemblages from other sites across the Caddoan area resemble those of the Titus phase.
    • The southern distribution of Cahokia-style figurines is heavily concentrated at Caddoan towns along a roughly 120-km segment of the Arkansas River valley of Oklahoma.
nounˈkadəʊənˈkadōən
  • 1A member of any of the Caddoan peoples.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Eventually, after repeated difficulties with French, Spanish, and finally the neighboring Texans, the Caddoans fled by force march in 1859 to Oklahoma, where their descendants still live.
    • And/or why did the Caddoans have to move every so often?
    • Even today, descendants of the interaction of Caddoans and French and Spanish settlers, known as Adaesena, still influence the area.
    • The Pawnees, Wichitas, and perhaps other Caddoans owned the plains-country, and their possessions reached to within a few miles of the Missouri, especially in Kansas.
    • For example, the Osage, Pawnee, Arikaras, Mandans, Wichitas, and Caddoans remained in permanent farming settlements.
    • Like other Caddoans, both groups had a mixed economy with farming and buffalo hunting being important.
    • The mound settlement of the early Caddoans consists of two temple mounds, a burial mound and a portion of the village area.
    • Painted potsherds originating with the Puebloan people indicate strong trade ties between these Plains Caddoans and their neighbors farther west.
    • The first major civilization was the Mound Builders, known in Oklahoma as the Caddoans.
    • An early scholar believed that they were Caddoans, ancestral to the Wichitas.
    • According to tradition, in 1840 the Caddo tribe and the Choctaws met in a fierce battle about two miles SE of Caddo, where the Caddoans came often to hunt and camp.
    • The Caddoans, on the other hand, were completely agricultural people and along with the Tonkawas resented the Kiowa intrusion.
    • This defense tactic was used by the Caddoans three times and it kept the settlers at bay long enough for the Indians to reach the deep woods and escape.
    • The Aays Province area Indians in East Texas, were probably Coahuiltec; hostile toward Caddoans and not very well known by Caddoan guides.
  • 2mass noun The family of languages spoken by the Caddoan peoples, which includes Pawnee and may be related to Siouan and Iroquoian.

Origin

From Caddo (a language of the Caddoan family) kaduhdacu, denoting a band belonging to this group, + -an.

 
 

Definition of Caddoan in US English:

Caddoan

adjectiveˈkadōən
  • Relating to or denoting a group of North American peoples formerly inhabiting the Midwest, or their languages.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This provenance pattern is significantly different from that found in the Caddoan mound sites and also diverges from the pattern we would expect if flint clay objects were circulated within a UMRV elite prestige-goods network.
    • If such a network existed, we would expect the pattern to more closely resemble that recorded for the Caddoan region.
    • The paste composition relationships of different Caddoan vessel forms and the conclusions of both the petrographic and neutron activation analyses indicate that the Mockingbird ceramics are the product of a local group.
    • The Caddoan language family includes the Caddo, Wichita, Pawnee, and Arikara languages, which are found on the central Plains.
    • Late Caddo period ceramic mortuary assemblages also differ considerably from region to region within the Caddoan area in the composition of jars, bottles, bowls, and carinated bowls.
    • Thus the Mississippian embraces a wide range of essentially localized groups: the Middle Mississippian, Fort Ancient, South Appalachian Mississippian, Plaquemine Mississippian, Caddoan Mississippian, and the Oneota.
    • No other contemporaneous mortuary vessel assemblages from other sites across the Caddoan area resemble those of the Titus phase.
    • The marked difference in the distribution and context of flint clay figures between the UMRV and the Caddoan region points to very different relationships between those two areas and Cahokia.
    • Custis was free to observe Creek ceremonies and Caddoan customs and skills (their talents with the bow put him in mind of stories from the Iliad) and to post a twenty-six-specimen botanical collection downriver.
    • The southern distribution of Cahokia-style figurines is heavily concentrated at Caddoan towns along a roughly 120-km segment of the Arkansas River valley of Oklahoma.
    • They conducted Xray diffraction and petrographic analysis of thin sections from a vessel suspected to have originated in the Caddoan region.
nounˈkadōən
  • 1A member of any of the Caddoan peoples.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And/or why did the Caddoans have to move every so often?
    • Eventually, after repeated difficulties with French, Spanish, and finally the neighboring Texans, the Caddoans fled by force march in 1859 to Oklahoma, where their descendants still live.
    • An early scholar believed that they were Caddoans, ancestral to the Wichitas.
    • The Caddoans, on the other hand, were completely agricultural people and along with the Tonkawas resented the Kiowa intrusion.
    • Like other Caddoans, both groups had a mixed economy with farming and buffalo hunting being important.
    • The Pawnees, Wichitas, and perhaps other Caddoans owned the plains-country, and their possessions reached to within a few miles of the Missouri, especially in Kansas.
    • This defense tactic was used by the Caddoans three times and it kept the settlers at bay long enough for the Indians to reach the deep woods and escape.
    • The mound settlement of the early Caddoans consists of two temple mounds, a burial mound and a portion of the village area.
    • Even today, descendants of the interaction of Caddoans and French and Spanish settlers, known as Adaesena, still influence the area.
    • The first major civilization was the Mound Builders, known in Oklahoma as the Caddoans.
    • For example, the Osage, Pawnee, Arikaras, Mandans, Wichitas, and Caddoans remained in permanent farming settlements.
    • According to tradition, in 1840 the Caddo tribe and the Choctaws met in a fierce battle about two miles SE of Caddo, where the Caddoans came often to hunt and camp.
    • The Aays Province area Indians in East Texas, were probably Coahuiltec; hostile toward Caddoans and not very well known by Caddoan guides.
    • Painted potsherds originating with the Puebloan people indicate strong trade ties between these Plains Caddoans and their neighbors farther west.
  • 2The family of languages spoken by the Caddoan peoples, which includes Pawnee and may be related to Siouan and Iroquoian.

Origin

From Caddo (a language of the Caddoan family) kaduhdacu, denoting a band belonging to this group, + -an.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/25 0:41:06