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Nilotic

ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to the Nile River or the people living near it
  2. of or relating to or constituting the Nilotic group of languages
    Nilotic syntax
NOUN
  1. a group of languages of East Africa belonging to the Chari-Nile group

How To Use Nilotic In A Sentence

  • The humid valleys and guelta banks have Sudanian riverine vegetation: Tamarix gallica, and some Ficus sycomorus, Acacia nilotica, Salvadora persica and Hyphaene thebaica. Tassili N'Ajjer National Park, Algeria
  • Forests, mostly in the north-east of the park, are dominated by kalam or kadam Mitragyna parvifolia, jamun Syzygium cuminii and babul Acacia nilotica. Keoladeo (Bharatpur) National Park, India
  • Based on the λmax of heterologously expressed opsins from O. niloticus PLoS Biology: New Articles
  • The most important fish in Lake Chad are the characin (Alestes baremoze) and the Nile perch (Lates niloticus). Lake Chad flooded savanna
  • And in a cave near Luxor, I found the creature, which I dubbed a Nilotic. SACRAMENT
  • The island parks were established to protect the breeding habitats of the Nile crocodile Crocodylus niloticus, hippopotamus Hippopotamus amphibius, puff-adder Bitis arietans, cobra Naja haje and sawscaled viper Echis pyramidum. Lake Turkana National Parks, Kenya
  • Scrub vegetation consists of low trees such as Acacia nilotica, Prosopis cineraria, P. juliflora, Tamrix aphylla, Zizyphus mauritiana, Capparis decidua, and shrubs such as Calligonum polygonoides, Calotropis spp., Thar desert
  • Acacia nilotica is easy to recognize by its bright yellow flowers in round heads, straight stipular spines often slightly deflexed, and dark indehiscent pods compressed over the seeds. Chapter 10
  • It is the mimosa nilotica of Linnæus, the shittah of the Hebrew writers, and grows abundantly in Palestine. The Symbolism of Freemasonry
  • Some form of speech like Fula, Kiama (Tern), or Kposo of northern Togoland, or one of the languages of the lower Niger or Benue, may have been taken up by ancient Libyan, Hamite or Nilotic conquerors and cast into the type which we now know as Bantu, -- a division of sexless Negro speech, however, that shows no obvious traces of Hamitic (Caucasian) influence. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 3 "Banks" to "Bassoon"
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