「cree」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)
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date back to pre-settlement days when the local | Cree had a legend about people who ventured into the |
Shirt gained fame by singing "O Canada" in | Cree at a National Hockey League game between the Ca |
direction of Grand Chief Matthew Coon Come, the | Cree launched a very visible protest of the Grande-B |
166C and 166D and are the seat of the Bigstone | Cree Nation, a Woodland Cree First Nation. |
This wall was sponsored by | Cree Inc., a local company that manufactures LED lig |
In 1985, the | Cree performed a ceremony in Edmonton "to bring his |
Cree is a former Senior Executive and Director of a | |
La Verendrye restrained the local | Cree from a war of revenge in order to protect the f |
es from many First Nations, including the Innu, | Cree, Mohawk, Abenaki, and Huron-Wendat nations. |
The Lake was named for a Plains | Cree legend about the Great Spirit shoveling dirt fr |
The lake takes its name from a | Cree legend about flickering lights appearing near t |
The residents were relocated to York Landing | Cree Nation, about 116km ENE of Thompson, Manitoba. |
t a Calgary Flames game in February 2007, young | Cree singer Akina Shirt became the first person ever |
lso been involved with the issue of the Lubicon | Cree in Alberta. |
ed from putchamin, pasiminan, or pessamin, from | Cree, an Algonquian language of eastern Canada, mean |
nce among the Monsonis, his own group of Swampy | Cree, and also with other Crees and Assiniboine furt |
Cree was also a component language in two contact la | |
Alderman | Cree is an Elder and Secretary of his local Church. |
Waswanipi is a Cree/Iynu ( | Cree being an English exonym) community in the Eeyou |
In 2009, | Cree announced an agreement to purchase a 592,000-sq |
ecember 1976 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada) is a | Cree actor and artist, who is sometimes credited as |
Keeper is a member of the Norway House | Cree Nation, and has been involved in a variety of s |
eveloping Inuktitut syllabics, derived from the | Cree syllabary and for writing the first substantial |
It was inspired by the | Cree syllabics and is thus one of the writing system |
Services are conducted in the | Cree language and in English. |
lartine was alerted to the French expedition by | Cree traders, and thus had time to prepare a defense |
The next most common languages are | Cree, Spanish and Arabic at 1.2% each; Tagalog and C |
and Quebec and representatives from each of the | Cree villages and the most of the Inuit villages sig |
he Iyyu, the chiefs elected by each of the nine | Cree communities, and one other representative from |
The youngest of four girls born to a | Cree father and Scottish mother on a reserve in nort |
y, MBC Radio provides a minimum of ten hours of | Cree programming and ten hours of Dene programming p |
content is in local ethnic languages including | Cree, Dene, and Plaudt Deutsch. |
stinct, linguistically and culturally, from the | Cree, Ojibwe and other Algonkian people of the Borea |
Bloomfield undertook field research on | Cree, Menominee, and Ojibwe, and analysed the materi |
Marriages or alliances between | Cree women and fur traders became an essential link |
As Woodland | Cree, they are a western branch of the larger Cree N |
The Tataskweyak | Cree Nation are located on IR Split Lake 171 at Spli |
here the ceremonial dances of the Sturgeon Lake | Cree Nation are performed. |
Eastern | Cree syllabics are a variant of Canadian Aboriginal |
The team played its home games at River | Cree Twin Arenas in Edmonton, Canada. |
Historian Douglas Hill characterized the | Cree group as a "war party... ready to take revenge |
Cree Summer as Peabo | |
Cree Summer as Susie Carmichael | |
In contrast to this, Michif words of Plains | Cree origin at Turtle Mountain, North Dakota, invari |
governments of Canada and Quebec as well as the | Cree Regional Authority and the Kativik Regional Gov |
The | Cree Regional Authority (CRA), formed in 1978, serve |
nd Council of the Crees (Eeyou Istchee) and the | Cree Regional Authority. |
It is situated on the | Cree Road between Cree East and Cree North near the |
From 10 April to 9 May 1943 | Cree sailed between San Francisco and San Diego towi |
te fighting against forces under the command of | Cree leader Big Bear. |
Gladstone was a | Cree by birth but was adopted by the Blood Reserve o |
Approximately a year after the battle, the | Cree and Blackfoot made a formal peace. |
At this post, the Assiniboine, Crow, | Cree, Ojibwe, Blackfoot, Hidatsa, and other tribes t |
The | Cree School Board and the Cree Construction Company |
The First Nation is today predominately | Cree culturally but also has some Saulteaux members. |
In | Cree, verbs can be very complex with up to twenty mo |
s the theatre of the 1885 battle staged between | Cree and Canadian troops. |
In | Cree the central point is the large Catholic Church. |
Cree was Chairman of the North Down District Policin | |
aily broadcast show and the founding program of | Cree Cable Channel 66 based in Moose Factory, Ontari |
The broadcast airs on Moose | Cree Cable channel 66 throughout the south-west coas |
1852 - unknown; but after 1935) was a | Cree war chief of the River People band of Plains Cr |
Fort McMurray First Nation is a | Cree and Chipewyan nation located near Fort McMurray |
s), a fast food restaurant, two primary schools | Cree and Clohanbeg , community centre, one garage (L |
en year absentee provision, though the Chippewa | Cree Business Committee recently repealed this act; |
As in the | Cree traditional communities, the whole hamlet becam |
ney from the settlement he created Air Creebec, | Cree Construction Company Limited, and Cree Yamaha M |
ngth of the North Road, except at km 290 at the | Cree Construction Company where fuel and repair serv |
Very often the | Cree dialect continuum is divided into two languages |
For practical purposes, | Cree usually covers the dialects which use syllabics |
The languages are | Cree, Ojibway, Dakota, Ojibway-Cree and Dene. |
ong with fellow co-stars Hardison, Jasmine Guy, | Cree Summer, Dawnn Lewis, Darryl M. Bell, and Sinbad |
The | Cree Government decides what are the priorities. |
On November 8th, 2007, Fox Lake | Cree Nation dedicated a monumental statue in Gillam, |
A member of the | Cree Flying Dust First Nation reserve, Matchee is on |
In the | Cree language, Ekota means 'special place.' |
petitors of Seoul Semiconductor include Nichia, | Cree, Lumileds, Everlight and Epistar. |
troduction to his extensive study of the Plains | Cree cites Fineday as his principal informant. |
Meskanaw is the | Cree word for trail or road. |
The name Seebe comes from the | Cree word for river. |
Kiskatinaw is the | Cree word for "cutbank" (steep river bank). |
He was named Ahtahkakoop, the | cree word for “Starblanket.” |
Ma-Me-O derives from the | Cree words for "place of many shore birds". |
Lake and Lesser Slave Lake all derive from this | Cree name for their enemies, though not necessarily |
e name "Slave" is an English translation of the | Cree name for their traditional enemies, including t |
It takes the name from Kakwa, the | Cree word for porcupine. |
Moosomin is the | Cree word for the moose berry or high bush cranberry |
The name, "Kinoosao" is the | Cree term for the word "fish". |
In 1951 Missanabie | Cree were formally recognized by DIAND as an Indian |
Cree village: found in Quebec | |
cottish fur trader; his mother's ancestors were | Cree and French Canadian. |
Sine speaks English, Arabic, | Cree & French. |
Michif is a mixed language combining | Cree and French. |
Michif: A mixed language based on | Cree and French. |
Every year, a group of | Cree youth from the village of Waskaganish, at the m |
re Champion and Ooneemeetoo Okimasis, two young | Cree brothers from northern Manitoba who are taken f |
He is a | Cree (Nehiyaw), from the Alexander First Nation Rese |
War Party is an award-winning | Cree hip-hop group from Hobbema, Alberta. |
This First Nation is part of the | Cree ethno-linguistic group, is a member of the Yell |
ddle Lake Nation is a Treaty 6 nation, from the | Cree language group. |
They are descended from | Cree that had come south from Canada, and from Chipp |
edly attacked for the first time by fur trading | Cree, who had become owners of weapons by trading wi |
tion Category I Land (land for exclusive use by | Cree) but has no permanent population. |
Jack Elam as | Cree, first henchman |
His acceptance by both Blackfoot and | Cree assisted him in bringing the different groups t |
Cree made his Major League debut on September 17, 19 | |
ly of twelve and he was born on the Saddle Lake | Cree Nation in a dirt-floored one room shack. |
eature, which is native to the mythology of the | Cree Indians in Canada. |
Cree is in the Cree/Cooraclare parish and in the dio | |
Who gives the War Whoop'), Chief of the Plains | Cree, was in the middle of the 19th century the lead |
of early-onset progressive encephalopathy in a | Cree community in Canada, described in 1988, which w |
Billy Diamond was the chief of the Waskaganish | Cree starting in 1970. |
Nations singer-songwriter from the Saddle Lake | Cree Nation in Alberta. |
ocumentary in northern Quebec of four James Bay | Cree communities in response to the James Bay Cree h |
ged Treaties 1 and 2 with the Ojibwa and Swampy | Cree Nations in southern Manitoba. |
Nemiscau (or Old Nemaska) is a semi-permanent | Cree settlement in northern Quebec, Canada, on Lake |
Saskatchewan while on a prospecting trip with a | Cree friend in June 1967. |
He grew up on the | Cree Ahtahkakoop Indian reserve in Saskatchewan and |
The name comes from the | Cree or Innu term kaniapiskau or kaneapiskak which m |
Cree and Inuit are spoken as the first language in C | |
It is used by both | Cree and Inuit natives as a harbour for their fishin |
pulation among First Nations, surpassed only by | Cree and Inuit. |
Most of the people living around | Cree are involved in agriculture and the majority of |
Coeur d'Alene, and her mother was of Kootenay, | Cree and Irish descent. |
The Chippewa | Cree Tribe is a mixed group of Native Americans in M |
primary difference between eastern and western | Cree orthographies is the shape of the final consona |
The Enoch | Cree Nation is a First Nations band in Alberta that |
The Driftpile First Nation (or the Driftpile | Cree Nation) is a First Nation with a reserve locate |
Ermineskin | Cree Nation is a First Nation, a western branch of t |
The Nisichawayasihk | Cree Nation is involved in the construction of the p |
n of Fox Lake according to the Little Red River | Cree Nation is 1,773. |
Garden River according to the Little Red River | Cree Nation is 483. |
The Bigstone | Cree Nation is a First Nation in Alberta, Canada. |
Fox Lake | Cree Nation is a First Nation located in Fox Lake, B |
A | Cree chief is buried along the eastern shore of the |
sh translation of Makwa Sahgaiehcan from Plains | Cree language is "loon lake". |
The Fisher River | Cree Nation is composed of two reserves; Fisher Rive |
D'Or Prairie according to the Little Red River | Cree Nation is 1,062. |
In other words, in | Cree verbs it is very difficult to separate grammar |
The | Cree village itself is officially named Whapmagoostu |
The name Kinuso comes from the | Cree word kinosew, meaning fish. |
Moose | Cree (also known as York Cree, West Shore Cree, West |
Kofford was born to | Cree Clarence Kofford and his wife Melba Nelson in S |
d, by 1861, been unsuccessful in persuading the | Cree near Lac Ste. |
and values, all of which he sang in his Native | Cree (Nehiyo) language. |
Wilton Littlechild or Wilton Littlechild, is a | Cree Canadian lawyer and former Member of Parliament |
For the | Cree tribe leader, see Big Bear. |
The company uses Seoul Semiconductor and | Cree XR-E LEDs in flashlights introduced in 2007. |
e the development plans have been canceled, the | Cree originally living here have started to return t |
Red Pheasant First Nation is a | Cree Nation located 33 km south of North Battleford. |
Shaganappi is a word of | Cree origin meaning "rawhide thong or lacing". |
Moosomin is a word borowed from the | Cree language meaning low-bush cranberry or squash b |
This was to honor the Fox Lake | Cree Nation members who died during the development |
In the | Cree language, Menisa means "berries". |
As a result, thousands of | Cree and Metis people from across Alberta and beyond |
iginal Museum displays the history of the Dene, | Cree and Metis peoples in time lines, maps, crafts a |
The | Cree and Metis make up over 90% of "tribal enrollees |
Language, along with languages such as Ojibwe, | Cree, Menominee, Miami-Illinois, Shawnee and Fox but |
Eastern Swampy | Cree and Moose Cree |
In 1979, the | Cree Village Municipality, identified as Whapmagoost |
The Bigstone | Cree First Nation host the annual Treaty Days Festiv |
Moose | Cree First Nation |
The Woodland | Cree First Nation is a First Nation in Alberta, Cana |
Missanabie | Cree First Nation is a "Treaty 9" Nation. |
Sucker Creek 150a of the Sucker Creek | Cree First Nation |
In 1996 Missanabie | Cree First Nation received a letter from Canada acce |
Out of 35 detachments, only the Moose | Cree First Nation detachment meets building codes.A |
Sucker Creek | Cree First Nation is a Cree nation located along the |
Thunderchild First Nation is an independent | Cree First Nation in Saskatchewan, Canada with no af |
The Bigstone | Cree First Nation Education Authority operates the B |
The James Smith First Nation is a | Cree First Nation in Saskatchewan, Canada. |
d 30 August 1843) was a religious leader of the | Cree First Nation who became the prophet of a millen |
there were 986 registered residents in Woodland | Cree First Nation, 697 of which were living on reser |
and dancer Lili Francks, a member of the Plains | Cree First Nation. |
Makwa Sahgaiehcan is a | Cree First Nation. |
Chief and Council are elected by the Missanabie | Cree First Nation. |
ormal adhesions to Treaty 9 with the Missanabie | Cree First Nation. |
Commissioners, "negotiated" a treaty with Moose | Cree First Nation. |
Fisher River (Ochekwi-Sipi) is a | Cree first nations reserve located approximately 193 |
Wawaskesy is a | Cree First Nations word. |
askatchewan - February 1, 1989) was a prominent | Cree First Nations leader in Canada. |
Aseneskak Casino is in Opaskwayak | Cree Nation near The Pas, Manitoba. |
April 2011, Kunuk is developing a project with | Cree filmmaker Neil Diamond about the 18th conflict |
In Canada, the major proportion of | Cree live north and west of Lake Superior, in Ontari |
ley's writing on the subject indicated that the | Cree were not murderous but more haphazard and bumbl |
nders of The Nation, a newsmagazine serving the | Cree people of Eeyou Istchee. |
Plains | Cree usage of the Roman alphabet does not differ gre |
ich closely represents and honours the original | Cree meaning of the word, "Keyano". |
The | Cree village of Chisasibi is about 100 kilometres (6 |
It also serves the nearby | Cree community of Whapmagoostui. |
able water across the globe, for example by the | Cree community of Split Lake, Manitoba, by the Mapuc |
First Nations communities, namely the Dene and | Cree peoples of Fort Chipewyan. |
ange, where he used his skills on such films as | Cree Hunters of Mistassini with Boyce Richardson, an |
The First Nations | Cree village of Eastmain is located at the mouth of |
Pilgrimage, an event having key significance to | Cree aboriginals of the Catholic faith. |
he Grand Council of the Crees, representing the | Cree villages of Northern Quebec, was created in 197 |
fuel, food, and lodging can be obtained in the | Cree village of Nemaska during the day time. |
The Council's head office is in the | Cree community of Nemaska, with offices in Montreal, |
e town quadrilingual, recognizing Chipewyan and | Cree as official languages. |
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