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Some Related Sentences

Ilongots and meaning
Abaca and Italon were subgroups of Ilongots meaning river settlers.

Ilongots and were
Both are ethnically and linguistically diverse, with a substrate of Agtas, Negritos who are food-gatherers with no fixed abode, overlaid by Ilongots and others in a number of tribes, some of whom were fierce head-hunters ( we are firmly assured that they have given up the practice ), with the latest but largest element of the population being Ilocanos.
Originally these places were inhabited by the Aetas and Panuypuyes ( Aritao ), the Ilongots ( Dupax and Bambang ) and the lgorot in the area west from the present native population of Dupax, Aritao and Bambang came about by the inter-marriages of the tribes mentioned above.

Ilongots and tribes
These first settlers included tribes of Ilongots or Italons, Abaca and Buquids.

Ilongots and mountainous
At the turn of the 18th century, the missionaries resumed their evangelical work and redirected their efforts to the northeast, towards rough, mountainous terrain inhabited by Ilongots.

Ilongots and .
Ilongots survived mainly by fishing and hunting.
Since Nueva Vizcaya's birth as a province, traces of the culture and customs of its early settlers — the Ilongots ( Bugkalot ), Igorots, Ifugaos, Isinais, and the Gaddangs — can still be seen.

meaning and people
Time stood still for these people, and their load of pleasure was so commingled with the shocks and pains of the dromozoa that the words of the Lady Da took on very remote meaning.
The Navajo people, who now reside in parts of former Pueblo territory, referred to the ancient people as, an exonym meaning " ancient enemies " although it is now used in the term " ancient people, or " ancient ones.
Isolation aphasia patients can repeat what other people say, thus they do recognize words but they can't comprehend the meaning of what they hear and repeat themselves.
The transition to the meaning " shield " may have come by folk-etymology among a people familiar with draping an animal skin over the left arm as a shield.
" A regional self-denomination is, Unangan or Unanga, meaning " original people.
Due to a false etymology, a popular belief is that they were most likely Finns – the obsolete name of Nenets people, Samoyed, has a similar meaning in Russian: " self-eater ".
The same wider connections can be hypothesized for the " cow " derivation: the Boeotians have been known for well over a century as a people of kine, which might have been parallel to the meaning of Italy as a " land of calves.
* Apostasy: the great tragedy of Israel's history, meaning the destruction of the kingdom and the Temple, is due to the failure of the people, but more especially the kings, to worship Yahweh alone ( Yahweh being the god of Israel ).
The mood of the story is fashioned from the start through names of the participants: Naomi, which means " my gracious one " or " my delight ," later asks to be called Mara, " the bitter one "; her two sons are Mahlon, " sick ", and Chilion, " weakening " or " pining " and Orpah, meaning " mane " or " gazelle ", is from the root for " nape " or " back of the neck ", appropriate for the daughter-in-law who turns her back on Naomi and returns to her people.
The traditional, classical or popular ( meaning of the people ) ballad has been seen as originating with the wandering minstrels of late medieval Europe.
In sociology, behavior is considered as having no meaning, being not directed at other people and thus is the most basic human action, although it can play a part in diagnosis of disorders such as the autism spectrum disorders.
For example, some people pronounce ( meaning " fish ") as, the " r " is dropped and the vowel begins by dipping much lower in tone than standard speech and then rises, effectively doubling its length.
Of the three Araucanian groups, the one that mounted the fiercest resistance to the attempts at seizure of their territory were the Mapuche, meaning " people of the land.
Others, though, have argued that the level of disagreement about the meaning of the word indicates that it either means different things to different people, or else is an umbrella term encompassing a variety of distinct meanings with no simple element in common.
The second meaning is similar to the usage of the term in other social sciences: a community is a group of people living near one another who interact socially.
Outside of Mexican American communities, the term might assume a negative meaning if it is used in a manner that embodies the prejudices and bigotries long directed at Mexican and Mexican-American people in the United States.
The game, first known as crapaud ( a French word meaning " toad " in reference to the original style of play by people crouched over a floor or sidewalk ), reportedly owes its modern popularity to street craps.
It is hardly conceivable that the Romans would have recorded such a form as Cimbri The name has also been related to the word kimme meaning “ rim ”, i. e. the people of the coast.
It almost always has an element of exclusion, meaning that some people are not citizens, and that this distinction can sometimes be very important, or not important, depending on a particular society.
The majority of the Mesoamerican people made chocolate beverages, including the Aztecs, who made it into a beverage known as xocolātl, a Nahuatl word meaning " bitter water ".
" The commoners were called liangmin ( 良民 ), meaning good people.
The inferior people were called jianmin ( 賤民 ), meaning cheap, lowly and mean people.

meaning and forest
Some authorities claim the word derives from the Late Latin phrase forestam silvam, meaning " the outer wood "; others claim the term is a latinisation of the Frankish word * forhist " forest, wooded country ", assimilated to forestam silvam ( a common practise among Frankish scribes ).
The manifest purpose of the tale may primarily be one of mundane instruction regarding forest safety or secondarily a cautionary tale about the dangers of famine to large families, but its latent meaning may evoke a strong emotional response due to the widely understood themes and motifs such as “ The Terrible Mother ”, “ Death ,” and “ Atonement with the Father .”
The name “ Jura ” is derived from the Celtic root “ jor ”, which was Latinised into “ juria ”, meaning forest ( i. e. “ Jura ” is forest mountains ).
Nepal's 2000-2005 total deforestation rate was about 1. 4 % per year meaning it lost an average of of forest annually.
The name orangutan ( also written orang-utan, orang utan, orangutang, and ourang-outang ) is derived from the Malay and Indonesian words orang meaning " person " and hutan meaning " forest ", thus " person of the forest ".
Georg Gerullis determined that its name was actually derived from the Old Prussian word pomedian, meaning fringe of the forest.
* Transylvania was first referred to in a Medieval Latin document in 1075 as ultra silvam, meaning " beyond the forest " ( ultra (+ accusative ) meaning " beyond " or " on the far side of " and the accusative case of sylva ( sylvam ) meaning " wood or forest ").
The name Gaul is sometimes erroneously linked to the ethnic name Gael, which is derived from Old Irish Goidel ( borrowed, in turn, in the 7th century AD from Primitive Welsh Guoidel-spelled Gwyddel in Middle Welsh and Modern Welsh-likely derived from a Brittonic root * Wēdelos meaning literally " forest person, wild man "); the names are, thus, unrelated.
Its name etymologically derives from Old Sorbian Drežďany, meaning people of the forest.
Between the Vosges range of mountains to the north and the Jura ( Gaulish word meaning ' forest ') range to the south, the landscape consists of rolling cultivated fields, dense pine forest and ramparts like mountains.
Some claim that the name comes from Vedunia, meaning " forest stream ," which subsequently became Venia, Wienne and Wien.
Most books explain this name as a British root ceto ( like Welsh coed ) plus Old English ham, thus meaning a forest settlement.
* Van or Vana, meaning forest in Sanskrit, Hindi and many Indian languages, giving rise to terms like Vana Parva ( the Episode of Forest ) in the epic Ramayana
It derives from an Israelite place name meaning " forest " in Hebrew, referring to a fertile plain near the coast of Israel.
The German name Waldenburg ( meaning " forest castle ") refers to the castle Nowy Dwór, whose ruins stand south of the city ; the name came to be used for the entire settlement.

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