Usar "aborigine" en una oración
aborigine oraciones de ejemplo
aborigine
1. The sections that most intrigued him were those dedicated to the life of the aborigines, wild life and the convicts
2. Having been inhabited by aborigines thousands of years earlier, it was only on January 26, 1788 when one thousand four hundred people arrived from England and settled in the colony
3. Perhaps the aborigines, poor swimmers according to Vera, were especially concerned about being dumped into the water
4. Part Aborigine, perhaps
5. Aborigines mostly hate us and won’t mix
6. Is it true that all Aborigines are drunken wife-beaters? Your opinions derive from religious hate merchants determined to maintain the lie that gays are evil so they can ‘Save’ us from them
7. ‗The cops? This is Queensland, Con, where the police murder Aborigines with impunity, beat up innocent tourists and kill suspects with Tasers for fun
8. Think of all the Aborigines who can never escape the abuse heaped on them everywhere they go
9. and there I saw aborigines and they were very overwhelmed
10. It was a young aborigine boy
11. Back to Thunder River, and still back, beyond Black River the aborigines had been pushed, with slaughter and massacre
12. The Hyrkanians are dark and generally tall and slender, though a squat slant-eyed type is more and more common among them, resulting from mixture with a curious race of intelligent, though stunted, aborigines, conquered by them among the mountains east of Vilayet, on their westward drift
13. Hosts of steel-clad riders galloped around the northern extremity of the inland sea, traversed the icy deserts, entered the steppes, driving the aborigines before them, and launched themselves against the western kingdoms
14. ’ The job having promised such rich pickings, ‘Professor’ Gurr, whom, I imagined, had concocted the original scheme, had demanded a larger share and this had led to the falling out of the two rogues- and incidentally, to my discovering the truth! It suddenly occurred to me that the mysterious remark about ‘-sorting out a black-” referred, not to an aborigine but to Martin Gurr
15. Leaving Africa, Spencer continued on his journey, next stopping in Australia, where he visited the Aborigines, who themselves thought they were the source from which mankind evolved
16. Back then, she had been a nomadic aborigine named Djanggawula who had lived with his tribe in the region south of Darwin
17. Slowing down her pace, then stopping for a moment, she took a chance and shouted out in Wagiman to the Australian aborigine
18. Ingrid then approached the aborigine and gave him a sign of friendship
19. ‘’In the past, the aborigines I knew called me Djanggawula
20. Ingrid looked at the old canvas bag slung across the chest of the aborigine: it contained a few roots and wild berries
21. Walking behind the aborigine, Ingrid waited to be hidden from the airfield by the trees, then stopped briefly to take off her T-shirt, tying it around her waist before resuming her walk with her torso bare, happy to be able to freely soak some sunrays
22. The aborigine man took that in stride and didn’t ogle her, women aborigines not wearing tops in the bush
23. Ingrid returned alone to the airfield more than three hours later, feeling good about having been able to get back in touch with her old aborigine roots
24. Synopsis: I recently visited some of the sites of Mesoamerica’s incredible past; the indigenous aborigines without any outside influence had built cities of a beauty and size unparalleled in Europe at that time
25. animal species on the planet; before their god realized that the sun didn’t revolve around a flat, motionless earth; there wasn’t enough water to flood the entire planet; no man’s wooden boat could hold a pair of each of the 13 million animal species; land plants can’t survive underwater; and all the Indians, Asians, Pygmies, Inuit, Europeans, Africans, and Aborigines of the world today couldn’t be descended from Adam and Eve through Noah’s family in only a few thousand years
26. else though as the words from the aborigine had set of a new tingling in his
27. ‘She! The Aborigine said that “SHE” went to Nazca
28. They say that the aborigines there are most ferocious and cruel
29. Unlike Genesis, which contains the seeds of Western scientific and philosophical thought (in that it sees creation as a specific event in time), the creation myths of the Australian aborigines depict creation as an ongoing event, which I see as a more 170 ALICE HICKEY
30. The Australian aborigines have always been trying to tell us that creation is
31. continuous, but in order to understand their myths we first have to see that the Australian aborigines are, or were, a very pure remnant of that early migration out of Africa 40,000 years ago, which is about the time the aborigines arrived in
32. Thus we could say the aborigine myths contain the essential spiritual concepts of the African Mother Goddess cultures of 40,000 B
33. maintained by the aborigines themselves and not scholars, so outside of changes brought about by internal forces, they provide the clearest window we have into that otherwise very foggy time
34. This is the way the aborigine understands The Dreaming: by becoming a part of it
35. aborigines’ way of witnessing Creation
36. For the aborigines, the psychic and physical worlds are co-existent realities they slip between seamlessly
37. Before my conversation with Munro, I had always assumed that the two poems had been written by a poet, and in this case, by an aborigine poet by the name of Eldred Van-Ooy
38. How could I publish them knowing what I did: that (at best) they were two pidgin poems of questionable authorship found (reportedly) on the back of a restaurant menu in Brisbane? Of course, they could very well have been the poems of an aborigine by the name of Eldred Van-Ooy, but just as equally they could have been written by some day-tripping hippy returned from a sojourn in the outback, or by some spinster inspired by the latest library slide-show travelogue on Ayres Rock
39. (Those “facts”, by the way, were roughly as follows: Eldred Van-Ooy, the author of the poems, was an aborigine born in 1891 in the outback near Brisbane and then raised from birth by white, middle-class parents, Mildred and Cinque Van-Ooy, who educated him to the point where he went on to become an instructor in hydraulic engineering at a technical college as well as the inventor of a unique waste pumping system
40. ‘The Aborigines had tombs as well, did they?’
41. Telling Toby all that rubbish about ancient Egypt and Aborigines might have been fun, but why had
42. The aborigines, the original titleholders of the land, made outcastes by the Aryan settlers in later years, became ready pickings for the Islamic tabliq, and being the victims of the Brahman social suppression besides the Aryan cultural oppression for so long, those native souls might have felt avenged by the Islamic intrusion into Hindustan
43. Aborigines being people who more or less stay put where they start out, it follows that they must live in places no one else would want
44. the title of Munda have dropped out of use, and the aborigines of this
45. But he wondered if there was something else, something that might benefit the aborigine residents of Bundingo long term
46. Why the Australian aborigines coming out of Africa walked 20,000 miles along the shores of Asia without going inland
47. North American Aborigines have lived for thousands of years by the same spawning rivers; catching salmon without driving them into extinction because they never took too many salmon
48. Australian aborigines have no interest in the rest of the world
49. Except for the modern humans coming out of Africa who settled down along the way during the migration process… and those that never left Africa and the Australian aborigines; all the rest of us can trace our ethnic roots back to central Asia
50. The next wave had better weapons than the Australian aborigines