释义 |
Definition of deerskin in English: deerskinnounˈdɪəskɪnˈdɪrskɪn mass nounLeather made from deer's skin. as modifier deerskin boots Example sentencesExamples - The traditional Ewenki house resembles an umbrella framed by twenty-five to thirty poles covered with birch bark and deerskin.
- By the end of the eighteenth century, trade cloth replaced deerskin as the basic clothing material.
- For ceremonies, the men wore a deerskin shirt decorated with paint, feathers, porcupine-quills and scalps.
- Women wore short, thick kilts of shredded tulles or skirts of deerskin.
- During warm months the Ojibwa slept on cedar bough mattresses, each person wrapped in a bearskin or deerskin robe.
- I'd spent nearly a year making the dress from four deerskins.
- One could almost believe that at any moment Scott and his men would come shuffling in, hang up their deerskin coats and start boiling a brew.
- The men wore deerskin breechcloths.
- More recent Indian medicine men carried charms, fetishes and sacred talismans in similar deerskin bags that must have been a potent symbol of tribal authority.
- Before the Ojibwa began to trade with Europeans and Americans, they wore clothing made from animal hides, primarily from tanned deerskin.
- The fundamental item of men's clothing was a breechcloth made of a strip of deerskin or fabric.
- The women wore deerskin dresses, leggings, moccasins, and petticoats made of woven nettle or thistle fibers.
- Women wore a short skirt and sometimes a deerskin shirt.
- The Mohican decorated their deerskin clothing, baskets, and other artefacts with quillwork, corn husks, beads, feathers, and paint.
- Charlie Palmer removed his walnut-colored canvas field coat and deerskin shooting gloves.
- He survived by eating his deerskin boots.
- He was wearing deerskin clothes that looked pretty grimy and he didn't smell pretty with the grease and whisky and dead animal stinks coming off him.
- The clothing of the Iroquois was typically made from deerskin.
- Traditional clothing for men consisted of a breech-cloth, deerskin leggings, a shirt, and, in winter, moccasins.
- With her long black braids and beaded deerskin dress, Rosebud Yellow Robe was an intriguing presence, holding audiences spellbound with her renditions of traditional Indian stories and her demonstrations of native crafts.
Definition of deerskin in US English: deerskinnounˈdɪrskɪnˈdirskin Leather made from deer's skin. as modifier deerskin boots Example sentencesExamples - Women wore short, thick kilts of shredded tulles or skirts of deerskin.
- Before the Ojibwa began to trade with Europeans and Americans, they wore clothing made from animal hides, primarily from tanned deerskin.
- The women wore deerskin dresses, leggings, moccasins, and petticoats made of woven nettle or thistle fibers.
- By the end of the eighteenth century, trade cloth replaced deerskin as the basic clothing material.
- With her long black braids and beaded deerskin dress, Rosebud Yellow Robe was an intriguing presence, holding audiences spellbound with her renditions of traditional Indian stories and her demonstrations of native crafts.
- The men wore deerskin breechcloths.
- The Mohican decorated their deerskin clothing, baskets, and other artefacts with quillwork, corn husks, beads, feathers, and paint.
- He was wearing deerskin clothes that looked pretty grimy and he didn't smell pretty with the grease and whisky and dead animal stinks coming off him.
- The clothing of the Iroquois was typically made from deerskin.
- Women wore a short skirt and sometimes a deerskin shirt.
- The fundamental item of men's clothing was a breechcloth made of a strip of deerskin or fabric.
- Traditional clothing for men consisted of a breech-cloth, deerskin leggings, a shirt, and, in winter, moccasins.
- For ceremonies, the men wore a deerskin shirt decorated with paint, feathers, porcupine-quills and scalps.
- During warm months the Ojibwa slept on cedar bough mattresses, each person wrapped in a bearskin or deerskin robe.
- One could almost believe that at any moment Scott and his men would come shuffling in, hang up their deerskin coats and start boiling a brew.
- Charlie Palmer removed his walnut-colored canvas field coat and deerskin shooting gloves.
- More recent Indian medicine men carried charms, fetishes and sacred talismans in similar deerskin bags that must have been a potent symbol of tribal authority.
- He survived by eating his deerskin boots.
- I'd spent nearly a year making the dress from four deerskins.
- The traditional Ewenki house resembles an umbrella framed by twenty-five to thirty poles covered with birch bark and deerskin.
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