Quapaw


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Words related to Quapaw

a member of the Siouan people of the Arkansas river valley in Arkansas

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the Dhegiha dialect spoken by the Quapaw

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
The Quapaw acquired the land for $775,000 in October 2012 from McRae Mortgage & Investment LLC, led by Ken McRae.
PREVIOUS: A group of students lugs a hand-built canoe into storage beneath the Quapaw Canoe Company in Clarksdale.
When full, the containers were taken to the solid waste facility, located between Jay and Grove, where it was weighed before being transported to Quapaw, where it was once again weighed.
Without Quapaw Tribal Library, Billings says that tribal citizens would have limited to no digital access.
Another twister killed one person in Quapaw, Oklahoma, before crossing into Kansas, destroying 70 homes and injuring 25 people in Baxter Springs.
Another twister killed a person in Quapaw, Oklahoma, before crossing into Kansas and injuring 25 in the city of Baxter Springs.
In Oklahoma, a powerful twister struck the town of Quapaw. "There have been numerous homes and buildings damaged and some destroyed," Keli Cain of the Oklahoma Emergency Management Agency told AFP.
At least one other person was killed in a tornado in the town of Quapaw, in the northeast corner of neighboring Oklahoma, according to Ottawa County Sheriff's Department spokesman Derek Derwin.
That twister was spotted in Quapaw, 200 miles (322 km) northeast of Oklahoma City at about 5:45 p.m., according to the weather service.
John Ruskey of Quapaw Canoe Company of Clarksdale has run up $20,000 in legal and accounting bills fighting a $41,000 bill from the Mississippi Department of Revenue (DOR) for sales taxes on Quapaw's educational canoe tours from 2009 to 2012.
This is also the 10th year since GCCC merged with Quapaw Technical Institute to become a brand new community college.
Home first to the Quapaw tribe, explored by the French trader Jean-Baptiste de La Harpe in 1722 and settled by Americans from the east after 1808.
Inspired by Psalm 19:14, Michael Horvit wrote this work at the request of Thomas Bacon, who later premiered it with the University of Central Arkansas Horn Choir (directed by Brent Shires) at the Quapaw Quartet United Methodist Church in Little Rock AR, in July of 2004, and then days later at the 36th International Horn Society Congress, at the Palau de Musica in Valencia, Spain.