| 释义 |
Wyandot
Wy·an·dot also Wy·an·dotte W0246000 (wī′ən-dŏt′)n. pl. Wyandot or Wy·an·dots also Wyandotte or Wy·an·dottes 1. A member of a Native American people formed of groups displaced by the destruction of the Huron confederacy in the mid-1600s, formerly located in Ohio and the upper Midwest and now living primarily in northeast Oklahoma.2. The Iroquoian language of the Wyandot. [Wyandot wãdát, ethnic self-designation.]Wy•an•dot (ˈwaɪ ənˌdɒt) n., pl. -dots, (esp. collectively) -dot. 1. a member of an American Indian tribe formed from dispersed elements of the Hurons and closely related peoples in the mid-17th century. 2. the extinct Iroquoian language of the Wyandots, descended in part from Huron. Wyandot
Wyandot: see HuronHuron , confederation of four Native North American groups who spoke the Wyandot language, which belongs to the Iroquoian branch of the Hokan-Siouan linguistic stock (see Native American languages). ..... Click the link for more information. .ThesaurusSeeHuron |