tepee$82353$ - traduzione in greco
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In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

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tepee$82353$ - traduzione in greco

TYPE OF NATIVE AMERICAN TENT
Tepee; Indian tent; Tipie; Teepees; The Indian Tipi; Tipis; Teepee; Ti-pi
  • Example of typical tipi camp circle on the [[Pine Ridge Reservation]], circa 1890
  • Siksika (Blackfoot)]] painted tipis, circa 1910
  • Four [[Kiowa]] tipis (1904) with designs. From top left to right: design featuring bison herd and pipe-smoking deer, porcupine design, design featuring arms and legs with pipes and lizard, and design featuring water monsters
  • An [[Oglala Lakota]] tipi, 1891
  • Crow]] lodge interior, 1907, showing the poles and outer skin at the top, the inner lining and bedding. The lashing rope is tied off to a wooden stake at the bottom of the photograph. Clothing is suspended on a line tied between two of the tipi poles.

tepee      
n. σκηνή ινδιάνων, σκηνή ερυθρόδερμων

Definizione

tepee
['ti:pi:]
(also teepee or tipi)
¦ noun a conical tent made of skins or cloth on a frame of poles, used by American Indians of the Plains and Great Lakes regions.
Origin
C18: from Sioux tipi 'dwelling'.

Wikipedia

Tipi

A tipi ( "TEE-pee"), often called a lodge in English, is a conical tent, historically made of animal hides or pelts, and in more recent generations of canvas, stretched on a framework of wooden poles. The word is Siouan, and in use in Dakhótiyapi, Lakȟótiyapi, and as a loanword in US and Canadian English, where it is sometimes spelled phonetically as teepee and tepee .

Historically, the tipi has been used by some Indigenous peoples of the Plains in the Great Plains and Canadian Prairies of North America, notably the seven tribes of the Sioux, as well as among the Iowa people, the Otoe and Pawnee, and among the Blackfeet, Crow, Assiniboines, Arapaho, and Plains Cree. They are also used west of the Rocky Mountains by Indigenous peoples of the Plateau such as the Yakama and the Cayuse. They are still in use in many of these communities, though now primarily for ceremonial purposes rather than daily living. Modern tipis usually have a canvas covering.

Non-Native people have often stereotypically and incorrectly assumed all Native Americans in the United States and Indigenous peoples in Canada live in tipis, which is incorrect, as many Native American cultures and civilizations and First Nations from other regions have used other types of dwellings (pueblos, wigwams, hogans, chickees, and longhouses).