How To Use Micmac In A Sentence
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American forms of the story, -- French-Canadian, Micmac, and Maliseet
Filipino Popular Tales
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Ancient Micmac folklore suggested that the extraordinarily high tides in the Bay of Fundy were caused by a mighty whale that splashed its tail into the water with such a force that the water continues to slosh back and forth from the impact, even to this day.
Atlantic Ocean
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My experiences with the Lakota, Ojibwa, Cree, Crow, Cheyenne, and Micmac medicine traditions taught that you must sincerely pray and often fast before knowing whether you should seek a vision.
The Bushman Way of Tracking God
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The Micmac scoffed at the notion of French superiority.
1491 « Gerry Canavan
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[Footnote: This word (Acadia) has sometimes been traced to the Micmac akade, which, appended to place-names, signifies an abundance of something.
The Founder of New France : A chronicle of Champlain
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He is but a colonial Micmac, or Scotch-Mac; a mere sub-thoughted, irresponsible exotic, in a governmental cold grapery.
Acadia or, A Month with the Blue Noses
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“There is no Indian,” said a Micmac chief, “who does not consider himself infinitely more happy and more powerful than the French.”
The Chosen Peoples
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Others have traced it to the Micmac akade, meaning a place where something abounds.
The Acadian Exiles : a Chronicle of the Land of Evangeline
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The Delaware, Iroquois, Micmac, and Nootka Indians used bittersweet as a poultice to treat arthritis, skin ailments, digestive complaints, and tumors.
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Frightening robbers under tree (F5): Micmac, Maliseet, Wyandot, Ojibwa
Filipino Popular Tales
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The Micmac called themselves megumawaach ` perfect men 'and migmac ` allies'; the Maliseet called them micmac ` porcupine people 'and mi k'am in Maliseet meant both "Micmac" and
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIX No 2
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Micmac" Indians, for Prof. Lee has spent his enforced leisure in putting in anthropometric work among them, inducing braves, squaws and papooses of both sexes to mount the trunk that served as a measuring block and go through the ordeal of having their height, standing and sitting, stretch of arms, various diameters of head and peculiarities of the physiognomy taken down.
Bowdoin Boys in Labrador An Account of the Bowdoin College Scientific Expedition to Labrador led by Prof. Leslie A. Lee of the Biological Department