Examples of 'arawaks' in a sentence

Meaning of "arawaks"

arawaks (noun) - a group of indigenous peoples in South America and the Caribbean
Show more definitions
  • plural of Arawak

How to use "arawaks" in a sentence

Basic
Advanced
arawaks
Arawaks from the island.
We have discovered a workshop where the Arawaks made tools from conch.
The Arawaks were then enslaved and made.
Interesting facts about the Arawaks.
The Arawaks are believed to have fled to neighbouring islands.
The effort to convert to the Arawaks failed as they rapidly died from disease.
The last of the Arawaks.
These sights give evidence that Arawaks inhabited the area for thousands of years.
The earliest inhabitants of the island had included Arawaks and Caribs.
The helpless condition of the Arawaks made him eager to protect them against their enemies.
Before the Europeans arrived a people called the Arawaks lived there.
Native Arawaks were already living there.
They were later replaced by the Arawaks and then the Caribs.
The Arawaks were a people from mainland South America.
Ensuite arrived Arawaks and the Caribbean.

See also

West Caicos was inhabited by the Arawaks.
Caribbean, they replaced the Arawaks including mixing them.
The Spaniards and British mixed in with the Arawaks.
Arawaks were Jamaica 's native inhabitants, peaceful people and skilled artisans.
Lifestyle of the Arawaks.
The Arawaks then began committing mass suicide, using cassava poison.
Saint Vincent was inhabited by a tribe of Indians who called themselves Arawaks Arawak article.
When they arrived, the Arawaks greeted them by bringing them food.
On the basis of their language, these ancient Indian inhabitants are categorized as Arawaks.
Arawaks spoke the " broken Spanish " which their ancestors had learned on Hispaniola.
This included the original population of Taino, or Arawaks.
The Arawaks were always very attentive to the refinement of character, beauty and art.
These are the Caribs, and these are the Arawaks.
The Igneris, then the Arawaks and finally the Tainos ethnic groups were the original populations.
St. Vincent was inhabited by a peaceful tribe of Indians who called themselves Arawaks.
As pacifists, the Arawaks and their descendants, the Tainos, were to disappear entirely.
They may have been related to the Warao people, or to the Arawaks or Cumanagotos.
Arawaks named this river " Surama ", and today 's name " Saramacca " is probably derived from it.
The Caribs took over the island from the original inhabitants, the Arawaks.
Today, in the islands, their kinsfolk, the Arawaks and Caribs, are hardly even a memory.
The earliest recorded inhabitants of Jamaica were the Taíno Indians, also known as the Arawaks.
Year 1650 shows none of the original Arawaks or their descendants.
When Europeans began to explore the Caribbean, Carib society had almost completely displaced the Arawaks.
Around 400 CE, the Arawaks returned and repopulated the island.
Originally, two Native American tribes occupied the islands - the Arawaks and Caribs.
Columbus also rounded up 1500 Arawaks and shipped them to Spain.
When Europeans began to explore the Caribbean, the Caribbean had almost completely replaced the Arawaks.
Before 1493, Arawaks and Caribbean successively populate the islands of the Lesser Antilles.
The more aggressive hunter-gatherers, the Caribs, annihilated the Arawaks and took hold of the island.

Search by letter in the English dictionary