Quapaw









Quapaw


Quapaw [kwaw-paw] Examples noun, plural Qua·paws, (especially collectively) Qua·paw for 1.

  1. a member of a North American Indian people formerly of Arkansas, now living mostly in northeastern Oklahoma.
  2. the Siouan language of the Quapaw.

Examples from the Web for quapaw Historical Examples of quapaw

  • Originally the site of the city was occupied by the Quapaw Indians.

    Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 16, Slice 7

    Various

  • The position of the village of the Algonquian Michigamea, who lived north of the Quapaw, has not been determined.

    Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan Tribes West of the Mississippi

    David Ives Bushnell

  • The name of the tribe, Quapaw, signifies “downstream people;” Omaha being translated “those going against the wind or current.”

    Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan Tribes West of the Mississippi

    David Ives Bushnell

  • They occupy a reservation of 72,000 acres, adjoining the Quapaw reservation on the south and west.

    The Indian Question (1874)

    Francis A. Walker

  • He lives in his native Oklahoma with his wife, a Quapaw Indian princess, and their two children.

    The Story of Geronimo

    James Arthur Kjelgaard

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