How To Use Nez perce In A Sentence
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With their wounded strapped to travois, the Nez Perces made their way through the Big Hole and Horse Prairie valleys.
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Ever since, the Nez Perce have been one of the most politically astute tribes, successfully holding on to their cultural identity.
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Indeed, by 1837, Marcus Whitman noted that the younger Cayuses spoke only Nez Percé and could no longer understand their native language.
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The root which the Indians used in so many ways is now known as camas; it is still much sought for by the Nez Percés and other wandering tribes in the Northwest, and Camas Prairie, in that region, derives its name from the much-sought-for vegetable.
First Across the Continent; The Story of The Exploring Expedition of Lewis and Clark in 1804-5-6
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Ever since, the Nez Perce have been one of the most politically astute tribes, successfully holding on to their cultural identity.
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During the summer, the Nez Percé gathered a wide variety of plants, including wild onions and carrots, bitterroots, blackberries, strawberries, huckleberries, and nuts.
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The Nez Perce are with them; the Cayuses, Walla Wallas, and other tribes say they do not understand them.
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Perhaps the most successful has been the wolf conservation programme adopted by the Nez Perce tribe of Idaho.
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The wolf has always been a totem animal for the Nez Perce.
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Inside, life-size tableaux re-create moments in history, like Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery meeting the native Nez Perce.
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However, the Nez Perce themselves placed their origins in the blood of a mythical monster slain by the culture hero Coyote.
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Many Nez Perce warriors carried a sacred war-club like this, with a stone head encased in elk rawhide.
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It was knowing that every living thinghad been placed here by the Creator and that we were part of a sacredrelationship," Elsie Maynard, a Nez Perce elder, once said.
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Of the Nez Percé, we read: "To the hood are attached medicine-bags, bits of shell, haliotis perhaps, and the whole artistic genius of the mother is in play to adorn her offspring.
The Child and Childhood in Folk-Thought Studies of the Activities and Influences of the Child Among Primitive Peoples, Their Analogues and Survivals in the Civilization of To-Day
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The most significant of the edibles, camas was eaten during the first of many friendly encounters with the Nez Perce along Idaho's Clearwater River.
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Perhaps the most successful has been the wolf conservation programme adopted by the Nez Perce tribe of Idaho.
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Ever since, the Nez Perce have been one of the most politically astute tribes, successfully holding on to their cultural identity.