释义 |
Definition of hunter-gatherer in English: hunter-gatherernoun A member of a nomadic people who live chiefly by hunting and fishing, and harvesting wild food. (主要靠打猎捕鱼和采集野生食物为生的)游牧民族成员 Example sentencesExamples - To get an answer, one has to start with the beginning, the tens of thousands of years humans spent as nomadic hunter-gatherers.
- Most ethnic groups have a history in which they passed from being hunter-gatherers to farmers.
- The Aborigines were nomadic hunter-gatherers who did not have a concept of possessing territory or of deterring trespassers from it.
- When the first Aborigines arrived in Australia, at least 60,000 years ago, primitive humans all lived as hunter-gatherers; the beginnings of agriculture in the northern hemisphere were not yet apparent.
- Why did people, after thousands of years as hunter-gatherers, settle down and start farming?
- Blades and tools were made in very similar ways at both sites, and the two sites may have been used by the same group of mobile hunter-gatherers.
- The Neanderthal people were roaming hunter-gatherers rather than village-dwellers.
- His primarily interest is in the Penan people, who live as hunter-gatherers in the forests.
- Few traces exist of the settlements of the earliest Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers in Southern France.
- It enabled them both to subdue the most resilient of the remaining classical empires (China, Japan, Ottoman), and to take over all the remaining areas occupied by barbarians and hunter-gatherers.
- Sometime during the last ice age nomadic tribes of hunter-gatherers from Asia first crossed the Bering Strait and entered the Western Hemisphere.
- There were serious revolts during the course of the seventeenth-century, and raiding by the nomadic hunter-gatherers from the eastern parts of the region.
- Over the centuries, they consolidated their power by trading portions of their harvests to the hunter-gatherers for land, as well as through inter-marriage.
- On the contrary, for people living as hunter-gatherers, it was a common practice, albeit disguised by various religious or cultural justifications.
- These people were the descendants of the ancient hunter-gatherers of Europe.
- The people of the period were nomadic hunter-gatherers which means that they have left little trace for the modern archaeologist.
- This is how hunter-gatherers have lived for millennia.
- The two books reviewed here examine Spanish-native interactions and efforts to establish missions among groups of largely nomadic hunter-gatherers.
- Far from being wandering hunter-gatherers, some Aborigines lived in villages, traded and farmed.
- Among the exhibits are flint tools made by Mesolithic hunter-gatherers.
Definition of hunter-gatherer in US English: hunter-gatherernounˈˌhən(t)ər ˈɡaT͟H(ə)rərˈˌhən(t)ər ˈɡæð(ə)rər A member of a nomadic people who live chiefly by hunting and fishing, and harvesting wild food. (主要靠打猎捕鱼和采集野生食物为生的)游牧民族成员 Example sentencesExamples - His primarily interest is in the Penan people, who live as hunter-gatherers in the forests.
- Among the exhibits are flint tools made by Mesolithic hunter-gatherers.
- Sometime during the last ice age nomadic tribes of hunter-gatherers from Asia first crossed the Bering Strait and entered the Western Hemisphere.
- Why did people, after thousands of years as hunter-gatherers, settle down and start farming?
- The Aborigines were nomadic hunter-gatherers who did not have a concept of possessing territory or of deterring trespassers from it.
- The two books reviewed here examine Spanish-native interactions and efforts to establish missions among groups of largely nomadic hunter-gatherers.
- It enabled them both to subdue the most resilient of the remaining classical empires (China, Japan, Ottoman), and to take over all the remaining areas occupied by barbarians and hunter-gatherers.
- This is how hunter-gatherers have lived for millennia.
- These people were the descendants of the ancient hunter-gatherers of Europe.
- When the first Aborigines arrived in Australia, at least 60,000 years ago, primitive humans all lived as hunter-gatherers; the beginnings of agriculture in the northern hemisphere were not yet apparent.
- To get an answer, one has to start with the beginning, the tens of thousands of years humans spent as nomadic hunter-gatherers.
- The Neanderthal people were roaming hunter-gatherers rather than village-dwellers.
- The people of the period were nomadic hunter-gatherers which means that they have left little trace for the modern archaeologist.
- Most ethnic groups have a history in which they passed from being hunter-gatherers to farmers.
- Few traces exist of the settlements of the earliest Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers in Southern France.
- Over the centuries, they consolidated their power by trading portions of their harvests to the hunter-gatherers for land, as well as through inter-marriage.
- Far from being wandering hunter-gatherers, some Aborigines lived in villages, traded and farmed.
- On the contrary, for people living as hunter-gatherers, it was a common practice, albeit disguised by various religious or cultural justifications.
- There were serious revolts during the course of the seventeenth-century, and raiding by the nomadic hunter-gatherers from the eastern parts of the region.
- Blades and tools were made in very similar ways at both sites, and the two sites may have been used by the same group of mobile hunter-gatherers.
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