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Indigenous Peoples' Day: Native American History - Introductory

Practice this list to learn the basic vocabulary of Native American history. You'll review key places and people in Native American culture, including pueblos, tribes, and shamans.
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Full list of words from this list:

  1. agriculture
    the practice of cultivating the land or raising stock
    Slash-and-burn was a product of European axes—and European diseases, which so shrank Indian groups that they adopted this less laborious but also less productive method of agriculture. 1491
  2. ancestor
    someone from whom you are descended
    Particular places might hold spiritual or religious significance for any Indigenous nation, such as a place mentioned in an origin story or where ancestors are buried. An Indigenous People’s History of the United States
  3. arrowhead
    the pointed tip of weapon used with a bow
    So I fished around in my pocket and brought out an Indian arrowhead that I’d found the day before and gave that to her. Old Yeller
  4. barter
    exchange goods without involving money
    “Now then, let us barter. In exchange for a fig or two I will share my nelumbo nuts, the best you ever ate.” The Golden Goblet
  5. bison
    a large humped animal having hooves and shaggy hair
    In 2012, the Fort Peck tribes saw the historic return of 63 Yellowstone buffalo to their reservation under a plan crafted by state, federal and tribal bison managers.
    Reuters
  6. brave
    a North American Indian warrior
    Then the warrior told his wife to lead him to the bear so he could kill it. When they found the bear the man had great fear because the bear was big, very big. The bear slapped the woman with his paw and changed her into a bear. The man ran to the camp to get the rest of the braves to help him kill the big bear.
    National Park Service
  7. buffalo
    a ruminant mammal resembling an ox
    The Indigenous peoples who lived on the Great Plains also used fire to extend those vast grasslands to make more grazing lands for buffalo herds. An Indigenous People’s History of the United States
  8. canoe
    a small, light boat propelled with a paddle
    Indigenous peoples are portrayed as having helped make the country great by sharing corn, beans, buckskin, log cabins, parkas, maple syrup, canoes, and even the basic concepts of democracy. An Indigenous People’s History of the United States
  9. chief
    the head of a tribe or clan
    Chief Rain-in-the-Face, the Sioux chief who had killed Custer’s brother and now occupied Sitting Bull’s cabin in the Midway, wore green paint that streamed down his face. The Devil in the White City
  10. clan
    group of people related by blood or marriage
    Corn, their staple crop, was stored in granaries and distributed equitably by clan mothers, the oldest woman from each extended family. An Indigenous People’s History of the United States
  11. colonialism
    exploitation by a stronger country of a weaker one
    The continued influence of settler colonialism and genocide show up when history is retold in a way that celebrates settlers and makes Indigenous peoples disappear from the historical record. An Indigenous People’s History of the United States
  12. colony
    a geographical area controlled by a distant country
    While Smith was establishing a colony at Jamestown, for instance, Pocahontas likely did save his life, although little of the rest of the legend embodied in the Disney cartoon is true. 1491
  13. confederation
    a union of political organizations
    Patuxet was one of the dozen or so settlements in what is now eastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island that comprised the Wampanoag confederation. 1491
  14. hogan
    a Navajo lodge covered with earth
    My mother motioned toward the door of our hogan and I went inside. Code Talker: A Novel About the Navajo Marines of World War Two
  15. lodge
    any of various Native American dwellings
    Other horses hauled lodgepoles and folded lodges when the people moved from one place to another. In the Footsteps of Crazy Horse
  16. maize
    corn
    I use “maize” because Indian maize—multicolored and mainly eaten after drying and grinding— is strikingly unlike the sweet, yellow, uniform kernels usually evoked in North America by the name “corn.” 1491
  17. mesa
    flat tableland with steep edges
    I sat behind our hogan, leaning against its familiar walls and looking up toward the mesa. Code Talker: A Novel About the Navajo Marines of World War Two
  18. moccasin
    soft leather shoe; originally worn by Native Americans
    Indian moccasins were so much more comfortable and waterproof than stiff, moldering English boots that when colonists had to walk for long distances their Indian companions often pitied their discomfort and gave them new footwear. 1491
  19. nomad
    a member of a people who have no permanent home
    They were nomads, living on horseback, traveling to graze their herds, defeating anyone who tried to move into their cold, high territories. Anya and the Nightingale
  20. potlatch
    a ceremonial feast held by some Native American tribes
    The Kwakwaka’wakw believe that their wealth, which comes from their surroundings, is a result of their connection to the spirit beings. It is through the potlatch—an elaborate gift giving and feasting ceremony—that they offer thanks to the ancestral spirits for their generosity, share their riches, and celebrate family ties. National Museum of the American Indian
  21. powwow
    a council of or with Native Americans
    “My mother loved going to powwows. But she never danced. She never owned a dance outfit. This couldn’t be hers.” The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
  22. pueblo
    a Native American village in the southwestern United States
    They walked out of the pueblo, across the mesa. Brave New World
  23. reservation
    a district that is set aside for a particular purpose
    We were going on vacation to Crater Lake and we stopped at a resort on an Indian reservation for the buffet lunch. If I Stay
  24. shaman
    one acting as a medium between the visible and spirit worlds
    And as a shaman, I can discover things in the spirit where I cannot go in the body, and I spent much time in trance, exploring that world. The Subtle Knife
  25. spirit
    any incorporeal supernatural being that can become visible
    “Get—” The spirits of the dead began shimmering dangerously bright, and Nico had to take up the chant again to keep them at bay. The Battle of the Labyrinth
  26. tepee
    a portable, cone-shaped tent used by some Native Americans
    The village itself consists of some thirty lodges or tepees of the largest and most ornate description known to Sioux architecture. King, Charles
  27. toboggan
    a long narrow sled without runners
    The Indian invented the toboggan, but he seems to have used it for a sled of burden and not as a pleasure chariot. Packard, Winthrop
  28. tomahawk
    weapon consisting of a fighting ax
    Before he buried the tomahawk, Red Cloud was undoubtedly the most celebrated warrior of all the Indians now living on the American continent. Jackson, W. H.
  29. totem pole
    a tribal emblem consisting of a pillar carved and painted with totemic figures; erected by Indian tribes of the northwest Pacific coast
    Pacific Northwest Indian artists carved beautiful masks, boxes, bas-reliefs, and totem poles within the dictates of an elaborate aesthetic system based on an ovoid shape that has no name in European languages. 1491
  30. treaty
    a written agreement between two states or sovereigns
    Faced with ongoing Indigenous resistance and continuous pressure from settlers, Washington’s administration negotiated the first of many treaties it would make with Indigenous nations. An Indigenous People’s History of the United States
  31. tribe
    a federation (as of American Indians)
    The whole Navajo tribe was forced to walk hundreds of miles to a strange and faraway place the white men called Fort Sumner. Code Talker: A Novel About the Navajo Marines of World War Two
  32. weave
    create a piece of cloth by interlacing strands of fabric
    Despite these very early first steps, neither pottery nor weaving took off until people became sedentary and thereby escaped the problem of transporting pots and looms. Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies
  33. wigwam
    a Native American lodge frequently having an oval shape
    “We’ll do like the Ojibway Indians. We’ll bend saplings from one side to the other to form a dome—a wigwam—and we’ll cover it with bark, just like they did.” On the Far Side of the Mountain
Created on Thu Jan 05 11:12:18 EST 2017 (updated Fri Jul 28 12:56:41 EDT 2023)

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