How To Use Fijian In A Sentence

  • The Fijian way of life is glorified as the kind of life where people look after you if anything goes amiss.
  • People from different parts of India, now called Indo-Fijians, came to work as indentured laborers on sugar plantations.
  • Every evening, at dusk, a statuesque semi-naked Fijian played on a huge drum, hewn from the trunk of an enormous coconut palm, which was the announcement that dinner was served. Archive 2009-01-01
  • The two minesweepers became the first two ships of the Fijian Navy and were recommissioned as HMFS Kiro and HMFS Kula.
  • Fijian folktales
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  • Native Americans and Fijians firewalked and a number of Christian saints were said to have firewalked for their faith.
  • On Sunday night, guerrillas mortared the Baghdad airport, killing a former Fijian soldier working for the British company Global Risk Strategies International.
  • In Fijian, the word sese means 'wrong or foolish'. Fiji Times Online - Local News
  • In the centre of it all stands a bemused young Fijian, a pair of lifebelts extending from outstretched arms, being a tree.
  • The pre-Christian religion of the Fijians was both animistic and polytheistic, and included a cult of chiefly ancestors.
  • If theres anything to go by – the Maori elders need to think things through rather than just having a knee jerk reaction or are listening to some ill-advise given to them by some who claims to know Fiji & ‘Nai Taukei’ well but in essence do not as they would have been one of those that the native Fijians calls ‘gone susu madrai’ Global Voices in English » Bloggers react to NZ Maori Party’s proposed trip to Fiji
  • Richly glazed and often spectacularly potted, the sources for these works include Anglo-Saxon cremation urns, Peruvian vases and, on at least one occasion, a Fijian carving.
  • What many will fail to realise is that regardless of whether it is a man or a woman, it takes a true blue blood to flow in your veins to be able counter head-on the dangers, the likes of which is descending upon the Fijian people. Global Voices in English » Fiji: Tension rises between government and Methodist Church
  • the Fijian population
  • Although sago palms are found on some of the Fijian Islands, this plant was never a staple as it was in other nearby islands of the Pacific.
  • The racial prejudice against non-Fijians inhibited and cramped the growth and practice of Sikhism.
  • Newcastle's helicopter saw a strobe light and beacon overnight and early Friday morning located the yacht's life raft and crew near Duff Reef off of the Fijian Islands.
  • She overspecialized when she concentrated on verbs in Fijian
  • The majority of Indo-Fijians who left following the coup were shop owners and other retail merchants and bankers.
  • Quoting what Tai_Nga said, “Go Mr Bainimarama alot of maori support your views Kia kaha” … ummm sori as Native Fijians living in Aotearoa we beg to differ with your views. Global Voices in English » Bloggers react to NZ Maori Party’s proposed trip to Fiji
  • The veneer is a concoction of tropical Fijian light and dark woods and, of course, is strengthened with a proper dose of epoxy.
  • The Constitution is designed to guarantee power-sharing between the country's indigenous Fijian and ethnic Indian populations.
  • I'm playing a lot for Montauban, which is great," said the Fijian, whose new team are seventh in the table with three wins and three losses. The Roar - Your Sports Opinion
  • Fijian, or Fijician, results, by a slight change of letters, from the word Phoenician; and there can be no doubt that the Fijians are descendants of those Phoenicians who, according to The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 17, March, 1859
  • He has taken a noble and high-sounding Fijian name and dragged it in the dirt to suit his nefarious purposes. THE FEATHERS OF THE SUN
  • The pity is they could not also see that the regime that was deposed was far from democratic, even though it had the support of most ethnic Fijians. Global Voices in English » Commonwealth suspends Fiji
  • Among Indo-Fijians, feasting is associated with marriages and religious festivals.
  • The most prevalent disease in Rotuma is undoubtedly yaws, or framboesia, known generally under the Fijian name of coko, though I also heard the Polynesian name, tona, applied.
  • If you do not like the Fijian national dish, -- _national_ in more than one sense, -- have the dear sons of Nature, as Carlyle probably would call them, not the right to reply, -- "We do not like your _sauerkraut_, if you are a German; your The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 17, March, 1859
  • Other ructions have appeared within sections of the Fijian elite.
  • Traditional Fijian clothing for men is a native kilt called a sulu.
  • Acalypha wilkesiana, the Fijian fire plant, is the parent of many modern cultivars and is in itself a showy ornamental.
  • The election campaign has highlighted the fracturing of Fijian politics and government institutions along racial, regional and sectional lines.
  • He also examines how attempts to insist on patrilineal descent for Fijian voting rights exclude many people who lead Fijian lives through maternal ties.
  • Heading into court in traditional Fijian sulu skirt, Speight looked calmly confident.
  • Boig the skipper, is in the harbor and Grief learns from his trader Ieremia of a banknote reading "The First Royal Bank of Fitu-Iva will pay to bearer on demand one pound sterling," the note signed "Chancellor of the Exchequer" Fulualea — a Fijian name meaning "feathers of the sun. “Have you lived? What have you got to show for it?”
  • On April 4, 2006, Premier Wen Jiabao of the State Council held talks with his Fijian counterpart Laisenia Qarase in Nadi, Fiji.
  • And then he was an _aitu_ a devil, and could speak neither Samoan, nor Fijian, nor Rídan The Devil And Other Stories 1899
  • The two minesweepers became the first two ships of the Fijian Navy and were recommissioned as HMFS Kiro and HMFS Kula.
  • For ethnic Fijians, interpersonal relationships and social behavior are governed by links of kinship.
  • The most prevalent disease in Rotuma is undoubtedly yaws, or framboesia, known generally under the Fijian name of coko, though I also heard the Polynesian name, tona, applied.

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