释义 |
Definition of Papago in English: PapagonounPlural Papagos ˈpapəɡəʊˈpɑːpəɡəʊˈpapəˌɡō 1 Former term for Tohono O'odham (sense 1 of the noun) Example sentencesExamples - For the Navajo, Hopi, Papago and other Native Americans already living in the Southwest, the land was sacred.
- The world first came knocking in the 17th century, with Spanish explorers who labeled them the Papago, roughly translated as ‘bean eaters.’
- Papagos make wooden carved figures, pottery pieces, and baskets. Their pottery is rustic, but however their best and most fine hand-crafted pieces are baskets; the ‘coritas’, made of palm leaves and torote (desert plants that women collect, prepare and weave).
- Reconstructed traditional houses of the Apache, Maricopa, Papago, and Pima are on display at the Gila River Arts and Crafts Museum in Sacaton, Arizona, south of Phoenix.
2mass noun The Uto-Aztecan language of the Tohono O'odham, a form of Pima with around 10,000 speakers. 帕帕戈语(帕帕戈人的尤特-阿兹特克语,比马语的一种,约有10, 000使用者) Also called Tohono O'odham (sense 2 of the noun) Example sentencesExamples - Tohono O'odham (formerly Papago) is spoken in Southern Arizona and Northern Mexico.
- Informally, our proposal is that while English has only one form of plurality, Papago has two: one based on identity and the other on equivalence.
OriginVia Spanish, from Pima-Papago ba:bawĭ-ʔóʔodham, literally ‘bean people’. Definition of Papago in US English: Papagonounˈpapəˌɡō 1 Former term for Tohono O'odham (sense 1 of the noun) Example sentencesExamples - Reconstructed traditional houses of the Apache, Maricopa, Papago, and Pima are on display at the Gila River Arts and Crafts Museum in Sacaton, Arizona, south of Phoenix.
- Papagos make wooden carved figures, pottery pieces, and baskets. Their pottery is rustic, but however their best and most fine hand-crafted pieces are baskets; the ‘coritas’, made of palm leaves and torote (desert plants that women collect, prepare and weave).
- The world first came knocking in the 17th century, with Spanish explorers who labeled them the Papago, roughly translated as ‘bean eaters.’
- For the Navajo, Hopi, Papago and other Native Americans already living in the Southwest, the land was sacred.
2The Uto-Aztecan language of the Tohono O'odham, a form of Pima with around 10,000 speakers. 帕帕戈语(帕帕戈人的尤特-阿兹特克语,比马语的一种,约有10, 000使用者) Also called Tohono O'odham (sense 2 of the noun) Example sentencesExamples - Informally, our proposal is that while English has only one form of plurality, Papago has two: one based on identity and the other on equivalence.
- Tohono O'odham (formerly Papago) is spoken in Southern Arizona and Northern Mexico.
OriginVia Spanish, from Pima-Papago ba:bawĭ-ʔóʔodham, literally ‘bean people’. |