Get Free Checker

ethnology

[ US /ɛθˈnɑɫədʒi/ ]
[ UK /ɛθnˈɒləd‍ʒi/ ]
NOUN
  1. the branch of anthropology that deals with the division of humankind into races and with their origins and distribution and distinctive characteristics

How To Use ethnology In A Sentence

  • His experiences among the Eskimos created in him a desire to understand the laws of human nature and prompted him to make a gradual transition from cultural geography to ethnology.
  • The roots of ethnology lay, in turn, in the traditions of natural history, moral philosophy and humanism.
  • The tours begin in Hanoi, where guests will visit the Museum of Ethnology, the old craft quarter and several pagodas and temples, including the Tay Phuong Pagoda.
  • ROBINSON, Life in California (New York, 1846); Bureau of Am. Ethnology Seventh ann. rept. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • Early Ancon and Early Supe culture,: Chavin horizon sites of the Central Peruvian coast, (Columbia studies in archeology and ethnology) by Gordon Randolph Willey Open Letter to Columbia University Community: Accept President Ahmadinejad's Invitation-If I Can Do it So Can You
  • In 2005 Ethnology of IES was endowed with the title of Provincial Elite Specialty.
  • Now a resident in Jerusalem and Vienna, she is considered an expert in Arabic studies and ethnology.
  • He is not only faithful to the truth in large things, he is accurate in small matters also; and where he makes use of any statement he always shows that there is justification for it; although, by the way, I can only guess at his reason for calling Attila a "Turanian" —a word which carries a pleasant flavor of pre-Victorian ethnology, and might just about as appropriately be applied to Tecumseh. VI. Productive Scholarship
  • 'I am not such a despairer of ethnology as some ethnologists would have me.' Modern Mythology
  • In 2005 Ethnology of IES was endowed with the title of Provincial Elite Specialty.
View all