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词汇 indigene
释义

Definition of indigene in English:

indigene

noun ˈɪndɪdʒiːnˈɪndəˌdʒin
  • An indigenous person.

    土著,本地人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The previous inhabitants, Taino indigenes, were destroyed by diseases, weapons, and enslavement brought by the Spanish.
    • But Bob's signification as the new indigene and the legitimate inheritor of the land is radically contradicted by the ending of the story.
    • He appears as a perfect republican, an American indigene who thrives in a libertarian wilderness.
    • Can we go to the region and say we've turned a new leaf but, by the way, we never got to a proper basis of reconciliation with our indigenes?
    • This is not the place to detail the history of the wars and battles that occurred as the settlers usurped the ancient territories of the indigenes.
    • Then, ask just what is required to jump-start genuine wealth-creating opportunities for indigenes of the oil-producing states.
    • Some historians and political analysts assert that the US polity manifested colonial features beyond its treatment of indigenes.
    • The Atlantic zone's people, mostly Protestants, include English-speaking blacks and 100,000 indigenes.
    • It was also the space where the Europeans first made consistent contact with the indigenes and vice versa.
    • It rather presents wealth, power and immortality as something which indigenes first had but lost.
    • Within this new legal framework, Spaniards could in good conscience punish the bodies of indigenes as harshly and theatrically as former conquistadors.
    • The French, by contrast, sought to ‘Frenchify’ their indigenes, and frequently went native themselves.
    • In the era of self-determination, the missionaries handed control to public servants and the indigenes, and the ability to maintain production ceased.
    • The violent police / indigenes relationship is a consistently troubling commonality in many parts of the world.
    • Governor Gordon was more sympathetic to the indigenes.
    • According to the 2001 census, indigenes made up 2.2 percent of the Australian population (410,000 in a total population of 19 million).
    • Population decline has the opposite effect, mitigating conflict among indigenes in the Hudson Bay region.
    • The persuasive powers of montage and myth worked together to isolate the ‘aggression’ of American indigenes from any historical or political context.
    • When everyone puts the empire behind them, when nobody wishes to be a colonist, how viable is the indigene's persona?
    • Preserving indigenes like butterflies in amber, even on the upper Nile, was impossible.

Origin

Late 16th century: from French indigène, from Latin indigena, from indi- (strengthened form of in- 'into') + an element related to gignere 'beget'.

Definition of indigene in US English:

indigene

nounˈindəˌjēnˈɪndəˌdʒin
  • An indigenous person.

    土著,本地人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The persuasive powers of montage and myth worked together to isolate the ‘aggression’ of American indigenes from any historical or political context.
    • When everyone puts the empire behind them, when nobody wishes to be a colonist, how viable is the indigene's persona?
    • He appears as a perfect republican, an American indigene who thrives in a libertarian wilderness.
    • It was also the space where the Europeans first made consistent contact with the indigenes and vice versa.
    • Within this new legal framework, Spaniards could in good conscience punish the bodies of indigenes as harshly and theatrically as former conquistadors.
    • Then, ask just what is required to jump-start genuine wealth-creating opportunities for indigenes of the oil-producing states.
    • The previous inhabitants, Taino indigenes, were destroyed by diseases, weapons, and enslavement brought by the Spanish.
    • The violent police / indigenes relationship is a consistently troubling commonality in many parts of the world.
    • In the era of self-determination, the missionaries handed control to public servants and the indigenes, and the ability to maintain production ceased.
    • Governor Gordon was more sympathetic to the indigenes.
    • Can we go to the region and say we've turned a new leaf but, by the way, we never got to a proper basis of reconciliation with our indigenes?
    • The Atlantic zone's people, mostly Protestants, include English-speaking blacks and 100,000 indigenes.
    • The French, by contrast, sought to ‘Frenchify’ their indigenes, and frequently went native themselves.
    • Some historians and political analysts assert that the US polity manifested colonial features beyond its treatment of indigenes.
    • This is not the place to detail the history of the wars and battles that occurred as the settlers usurped the ancient territories of the indigenes.
    • Preserving indigenes like butterflies in amber, even on the upper Nile, was impossible.
    • It rather presents wealth, power and immortality as something which indigenes first had but lost.
    • Population decline has the opposite effect, mitigating conflict among indigenes in the Hudson Bay region.
    • But Bob's signification as the new indigene and the legitimate inheritor of the land is radically contradicted by the ending of the story.
    • According to the 2001 census, indigenes made up 2.2 percent of the Australian population (410,000 in a total population of 19 million).

Origin

Late 16th century: from French indigène, from Latin indigena, from indi- (strengthened form of in- ‘into’) + an element related to gignere ‘beget’.

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