aborigin

aborigin

(æbˈɒrɪdʒɪn)
adj
another word for aboriginal
n
another word for aborigine
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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The search terms used were the following: aborigin * or Indigenous; high school or secondary school *; career *; career promotion * or career support *.
Within each education group, the average earnings of Aborigin al earners ranged from 72% to 76% of the average earnings of all Canadians.
I have also conducted prison interviews with a man who delivered up an item of Aborigin al prison culture saying that that he, like all those other prisoners he chose to have as mates in jail, was one prisoner among the many who were each and every one of them 'doing another man's time.') (25)
In an essay in which he calls for semiotic interpretation of 'the human passions', Fred Myers (1988) provides an account of 'The Logic of Anger' as this logic pertains to Pintupi who are Aborigines of the Central Australian Desert.
The main reason for pursuing paleoparasitological research in Argentina is to understand the impact of disease during the paleoepidemiological transition caused by the contact of Europeans with Patagonian Aborigins.
Form and size of the dental arches in a school population of Amazonian's aborigins
While public discussion of these cross-cultural partnerships is relatively recent, encounters between Aborigines and non-white seafarers and sojourners have a very long history in this country.
Encounters between Aborigines and non-white seafarers in the north considerably predated white invasion.

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