Kiowa$42523$ - translation to spanish
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Kiowa$42523$ - translation to spanish

NATION OF AMERICAN INDIANS OF THE GREAT PLAINS
Kiowas; Kiowa Indian Tribe of Oklahoma; Kiowa Indians; Kiowa Nation; Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma; Kiowa Tribe; Kiowa tribe; Kiowa people; Kiowa People; Kiowa cuisine; Kioway
  • 1865 Treaty Map
  • Red sandstone cliffs in the Black Hills Wyoming, former Kiowa territory which remains a sacred area to them in modern times.
  • Big Tree]], a Kiowa chief and warrior
  • ''Elk and Buffalo Grazing among Prairie Flowers'' 1846–48, painted by [[George Catlin]] in Texas.
  • Calendar of 37 months, 1889–92, kept on a skin by Anko, ca. 1895
  • Cut-Throat Massacre, 1833. A picture from the Dohasan winter count.
  • Wichita]], and Josephine Parker, Kiowa, with their beadwork
  • J.T. Goombi, former Kiowa tribal chairman and first vice-president of the [[National Congress of American Indians]]
  • Ledger drawing depicting a meeting between a Kiowa–Comanche war party and a Pawnee war party (right side).
  • The Southern Plains territory of the Kiowa Nation at the time of European contact (see text for migrations).
  • Ledger drawing of Kiowas engaging in horse mounted warfare with traditional enemy forces, 1875.
  • Ledger drawings by Silver Horn featuring a collection of Kiowa shield designs, 1904.
  • Four Kiowa tipis with designs, 1904. Top L to R, bison herd and pipe-smoking deer; porcupines; bottom, L to R: arms and legs with pipes and lizard; mythical water monsters.
  • A Kiowa ledger drawing possibly depicting the Buffalo Wallow battle in 1874, a fight between Southern Plains Indians and the U.S. Army during the Red River War.
  • Ledger drawing of mounted Kiowa hunters hunting [[pronghorn]] antelope with bows and lance, c.1875–1877.
  • Kiowa hunting [[elk]] on horseback, c. 1875–1877
  • Southern plains of the Llano Estacado in the Texas Panhandle.
  • date=July 3, 2012 }}. ''University of New Mexico Today.'' 8 November 2007 (retrieved 25 February 2010)</ref>
  • Lone Wolf]], Kiowa chief, ca. 1907
  • [[Sitting Bear]], Kiowa chief
  • Ma-may-dayte
  • Satanta]], Kiowa chief
  • Guipago]], Kiowa chief

Kiowa      
n. quiowa, miembro de una tribu india; el idioma de dicha tribu
lone wolf         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Lone wolf; Lone Wolves; Lone Wolf (song); Lone Wolf (disambiguation); Lone Wolf (person); Lonewolf; Lone Wolf (album); Lone Wolf (novel); Lone Wolf(novel); Lone Wolf (Kiowa); Lone Wolf (chief); Lone Wolf (film)
lobo solitario, persona solitaria
lone wolf         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Lone wolf; Lone Wolves; Lone Wolf (song); Lone Wolf (disambiguation); Lone Wolf (person); Lonewolf; Lone Wolf (album); Lone Wolf (novel); Lone Wolf(novel); Lone Wolf (Kiowa); Lone Wolf (chief); Lone Wolf (film)
(n.) = lobo solitario, persona solitaria
Ex: The town was at loggerheads until one moonlit night a neighbour discovered the hen thief, a hungry lone wolf = El pueblo estuvo enfrentado hasta que una noche de luna un vecino descubrió al ladrón de gallinas: un lobo solitario y hambriento.

Definition

Tanoan
[t?'n???n]
¦ noun a small language family comprising a number of Pueblo Indian languages.
¦ adjective relating to Tanoan.
Origin
from Sp. Tano + -an.

Wikipedia

Kiowa

Kiowa () people are a Native American tribe and an indigenous people of the Great Plains of the United States. They migrated southward from western Montana into the Rocky Mountains in Colorado in the 17th and 18th centuries, and eventually into the Southern Plains by the early 19th century. In 1867, the Kiowa were moved to a reservation in southwestern Oklahoma.

Today, they are federally recognized as Kiowa Indian Tribe of Oklahoma with headquarters in Carnegie, Oklahoma. As of 2011, there were 12,000 members. The Kiowa language (Cáuijògà), part of the Tanoan language family, is in danger of extinction, with only 20 speakers as of 2012.