caucasoid in English

adjective
1
of or relating to the Caucasian division of humankind.

Use "caucasoid" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "caucasoid" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "caucasoid", or refer to the context using the word "caucasoid" in the English Dictionary.

1. Berbers, aboriginal Caucasoid peoples of N Africa, called Imazighen in the Tamazight language

2. These races were called Australoid, Mongoloid, Caucasoid, and Negroid

3. Drillmaster cylinder-bored Assignably barycenter lavandero Caucasoid trip's tugging chifforobe Saad

4. Yes, Indians are predominantly Caucasian (Caucasoid to be more correct)

5. 5 synonyms for Caucasian: White, White person, Caucasian language, Caucasic, Caucasoid

6. ADVERTISEMENTS: The 2 groups of Australoid or archaic Caucasoid are as follows: 1

7. Darvidians are Australoid in origin but now with heavy caucasoid influence --Digitalseal 22:14, 26 March 2006 (UTC) Definition of Caucasoid (re: North Africans) North africa term to broad

8. The Australoids are found to possess some primitive features that denotes the survivals of some early Caucasoid varieties

9. Caucasoid, Negroid, Mongoloid and Australoid They are each unique and distinct and classified according to genetics, phenotypes skull structure etc

10. 29 Numerous persons with only a few Negroid traits annually pass over and are ab-sorbed into the dominant Caucasoid population.

11. The allele frequencies obtained (FXIIIA*1 = 0.7787, FXIIIA*2 = 0.2212) are in agreement with previously published data for Caucasoid populations.

12. The Australoid “Dravidianized” the culture of the Indo-European Caucasoid, whose racial purity had been diluted by Australoid and Mongoloid blood

13. Australoid is essentially synonymous with Australian (Australia is 'south continent/land'), but is used to distinguish a 'racial' categorization from the nationality (which is primarily 'racially' Caucasoid).

14. Today “Caucasian” lacks any real scientific meaning (though its cousin “Caucasoid” is still used in some disciplines), but hangs on in common usage as a blanket term for white/European people.

15. Caucasian in the racial classification as developed by Blumenbach and others in the 19th century, Caucasian (or Caucasoid) included peoples whose skin colour ranged from light (in northern Europe) to dark (in parts of North Africa and India).Although the classification is outdated and the categories are now not generally accepted as scientific, the term Caucasian has acquired a more restricted