Malecite


Also found in: Dictionary, Wikipedia.
Graphic Thesaurus  🔍
Display ON
Animation ON
Legend
Synonym
Antonym
Related
  • noun

Synonyms for Malecite

a member of the Algonquian people of northeastern Maine and New Brunswick

Related Words

the Algonquian language of the Malecite and Passamaquody

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
(On the other hand, vocables might indicate that she simply forgot the words in this one phrase.) My search among other Wabanaki or Innu repertoires revealed that Malecite "wedding dances" recorded by Mechling in 1911 have phrases in triple metre, rare among other genres of Algonquian music, but there is nothing else to connect this part of Santu's song to the Malecite genre.
Malecite Animal Calls, Music, Ceremonial, Sound recordings.
The award in the Natural Resources category was given to Les Pecheries Wulustuk-Conseil de la Premiere Nation Malecite de Viger, based in Cacouana.
Invitations have also been extended to officials of the following First Nations: Abenaki, Algonquin, Atikamekw, Huron, Inuit, Malecite, Micmac, Mohawk, Montagnais, Naskapi, Ojibway and the Cree of Northern Ontario.
As he passed by a Malecite village he saw a young Indian girl, daughter of the voice of the woodlands, lakes, and mountains, and carried her off of a cave far, far away.
The Malecite, Iroquois, Ojibway, and some other Indian tribes invented birch-bark canoes.
First published in hard cover in 1963, this volume remains among the most definitive works on Native boats of North America, the main text being based on the research of an artist-craftsman, Edwin Adney, who in 1889 built his first bark canoe under the direction of Peter Joe, a Malecite Indian who lived near Woodstock, New Brunswick.
Shakespeare in The Red, a Winnipeg-based touring company, and the Manitoulin Island group De-ba-jeh-mu-jig Theatre, whose work has served as outreach for at risk Aboriginal youths, have employed Shakespeare's texts to positively assert Aboriginal identity For his part, Yves Sioui Durand runs the only francophone Aboriginal theatre company in Canada, Ondinnok, and wrote Hamlet le Malecite about a young First Nations man struggling with his racial identity.
The Natural Resources Award was presented to Conseil Malecite de Viger (Fishery), a fishery founded in 2000 by the Malecites of Viger.
And what it knew was that "Cadie must have been the original name for the territory," taken from the Malecite and Micmac word cadic, meaning "the country." And Cadie ought still to be in use because Cadiens still speak "the language of Touraine and du Berry, the language our forebears spoke when they first stepped off the boats at Port-Royal." He found the presence of such aboriginal place names as Passamaquoddy, Subenacadie, and Tracadie "proof that the name Cadie or Cadic was very frequent" before the arrival of the French.
Virunga (by Sodium), Gravelines (by Cadmus), Maitland (by Stupendous), Monsanto (by Breton), Acoma (by Rheffic), Earth Spirit (by Amber Rama), Malecite (by Fin Bon), Pawneese (by Carvin), Catus (by New Chapter), Waya (by Faraway Son), All Along (by Targowice), Seurat (by Crimson Beau), Epervier Bleu (by Saint Cyrien), Arcangues (by Sagace), Bright Moon and Moonlight Dance (by Alysheba), Bigstone and Lost World (by Last Tycoon), Agathe (by Manila), Poplar Bluff (by Dowsing), Tamise (by Time For A Change), Miss Tahiti (by Tirol), Prairie Runner (by Arazi).
The Business Creation Award was given to Amalecite 1, a new commercial crab and shrimp fishing operation founded by the Malecite community of Viger and based in Cacouna, Que.
The First Nations people, including Inuit, Abenaki, Algonquin, Attikamek, Cree, Huron, Malecite, Micmac, Mohawk, Montagnais and Naskapis, are spread throughout the province's geographically diverse landscape.