释义 |
Definition of Sami in English: Samiplural noun ˈsɑːmisɑːmˈsɑmi The Lapps of northern Scandinavia. 萨米人(斯堪的纳维亚北部的拉普人) Example sentencesExamples - At Opera we will soon release a version of Northern (our italics - ed) Sami.
- Some groups of Sami practice reindeer nomadism and range across northern Sweden and Finland.
- There are also Swedish and other European variants, but there is only one Sami example, which must also have been told by Ellen.
- It is almost uniquely Finnish, lines in descriptions of the trip to the imaginary world having counterparts in the Kalevala and also in Sami practices.
- The Sami of northern Scandinavia used the inner bark of Scots pines for food.
- He was primarily a linguist; one reason he collected folklore was to document Nordic loanwords in Sami.
- They're dressed, as Sami usually are, in modern clothing with several traditional touches.
- There are Samis also in Russia - a fact worth noting, especially when it comes to comparative studies and the indexing of Sami folk literature.
- Today most Sami practice the dominant Lutheran religion of the Nordic countries in which they live.
- The Sami in northern Norway say that time is always coming rather than going.
- The story about him, the shaman in a Sami village in Norway, evokes ideas about a religious tradition being kept alive in secret.
- On the packed-ice road, it's not uncommon to see an indigenous Sami herding reindeer.
- In northern Scandinavia, many rights of the Sami peoples are respected vis-a-vis their traditional pursuits.
- The Sami, like the Inuit, lived in the Arctic for thousands of years before European whalers braved the Northern climate.
- Although this legend is told in many places in Norway, it is favoured among the Sami people and features the enemy as the Russians, Swedes or just plain robbers.
- To be photographed, she put on her Sami cap: ‘I'll put on my cap so that I get to be a Sami,’ she said.
- He obtained a PhD in both philology and theology and possessed great knowledge of both the Sami and Finnish languages.
- No one is ever quite sure how the Sami people of Lapland managed to lay such undisputed claim to the fact that Santa Claus abides among them.
- For many people a new religion is controversial, just as it is for the Christian people in the Sami village mentioned in the newspaper article.
- She had had a couple of narratives about Sami shamans, noaidies, so she was asked if it was a fact that some people had the ability to inflict evil on others.
UsageSami is the term by which the Lapps themselves prefer to be known. Its use is becoming increasingly common, although Lapp is still the main term in general use OriginLappish, of unknown origin. Definition of Sami in US English: Sami(also Saame, Saami, Same) plural nounˈsɑmiˈsämē The Lapps of northern Scandinavia. 萨米人(斯堪的纳维亚北部的拉普人) Example sentencesExamples - He was primarily a linguist; one reason he collected folklore was to document Nordic loanwords in Sami.
- Today most Sami practice the dominant Lutheran religion of the Nordic countries in which they live.
- The Sami, like the Inuit, lived in the Arctic for thousands of years before European whalers braved the Northern climate.
- She had had a couple of narratives about Sami shamans, noaidies, so she was asked if it was a fact that some people had the ability to inflict evil on others.
- At Opera we will soon release a version of Northern (our italics - ed) Sami.
- Although this legend is told in many places in Norway, it is favoured among the Sami people and features the enemy as the Russians, Swedes or just plain robbers.
- They're dressed, as Sami usually are, in modern clothing with several traditional touches.
- He obtained a PhD in both philology and theology and possessed great knowledge of both the Sami and Finnish languages.
- The Sami of northern Scandinavia used the inner bark of Scots pines for food.
- It is almost uniquely Finnish, lines in descriptions of the trip to the imaginary world having counterparts in the Kalevala and also in Sami practices.
- The Sami in northern Norway say that time is always coming rather than going.
- There are also Swedish and other European variants, but there is only one Sami example, which must also have been told by Ellen.
- The story about him, the shaman in a Sami village in Norway, evokes ideas about a religious tradition being kept alive in secret.
- In northern Scandinavia, many rights of the Sami peoples are respected vis-a-vis their traditional pursuits.
- No one is ever quite sure how the Sami people of Lapland managed to lay such undisputed claim to the fact that Santa Claus abides among them.
- Some groups of Sami practice reindeer nomadism and range across northern Sweden and Finland.
- To be photographed, she put on her Sami cap: ‘I'll put on my cap so that I get to be a Sami,’ she said.
- For many people a new religion is controversial, just as it is for the Christian people in the Sami village mentioned in the newspaper article.
- There are Samis also in Russia - a fact worth noting, especially when it comes to comparative studies and the indexing of Sami folk literature.
- On the packed-ice road, it's not uncommon to see an indigenous Sami herding reindeer.
OriginLappish, of unknown origin. |