comanches in English

noun
1
a member of an American Indian people of the southwestern US. The Comanche were among the first to acquire horses (from the Spanish) and resisted white settlers fiercely.
Dragging them from their wide open spaces into captivity is akin to the American scandal of driving Comanches and other Plains Indians onto reservations.
2
the Uto-Aztecan language of the Comanche.
He researched the vocabulary of six very different languages - English and Spanish, two Asian languages, Comanche , and the language of a non-literate community in Siberia.

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

1. Comanches synonyms, Comanches pronunciation, Comanches translation, English dictionary definition of Comanches

2. Comanches were nomadic hunter-gatherers

3. Comanches The Comanches were the first Native people to adopt the classic horse-mounted lifestyle of the Plains

4. The Comanches were great and fearless warriors.

5. There once were as many as 20,000 Comanches

6. Comanches, like other Plains tribes, practiced kidnap slavery

7. The Comanches wanted recognition of their boundaries as a sovereign land and the Texans wanted the release of hostages held by the Comanches

8. The Comanches were much more than just warriors

9. Government, the Comanches ruled the Llano Estacado until the mid 1870s.

10. After acquiring the horse, groups of Comanches separated from the Shoshoni and …

11. Comanches acted as brokers to the Northern tribes, providing horses already broken

12. The Comanches were expert horse-breeders, and both men and women were accomplished riders

13. The Comanches were not a gentle people, but they found cannibalism repulsive

14. The Comanches are one of the most historically important Indian cultures from Texas

15. The Comanches: A History, 1706-1875 (Studies in the Anthropology of North American Indians)

16. Comanches probably learned about peyote circa 1800 as they moved into southern Texas and northern Mexico

17. Se calcula que su población máxima fue de 20.000 Comanches

18. Feb 17, 2014 - Explore Comanche Museum's board "Famous Comanches", followed by 563 people on Pinterest

19. Comanches had used it to lethal effect against the Spanish in the early eighteenth century

20. War with the Comanches forced bands of Apaches to retreat from the plains into these inhospitable mountains

21. I read The Comanches by Wallace and Hoebel right after reading Empire of the Summer Moon by Gwynne

22. By the time Europeans encountered them, the Comanches were primarily living in Texas, Oklahoma, and and New Mexico

23. The Comanches: A History, 1706-1875 (Studies in the Anthropology of North American Indians) [Kavanagh, Thomas W.] on Amazon.com

24. The Comanches had left in great haste, dragging their enormous load with them, leaving a broad trail up the canyon

25. The Comanches, a branch of the Shoshones from what is now Colorado, rode onto the southern Plains to hunt buffalo and raid

26. Late in the 17th century, they broke into two bands, and those who would later be known as the Comanches moved south

27. The Comanches had commanded the high plains of Central and West Texas for more than a century and waged continuous warfare against white encroachment

28. INTRODUCTION Originally, the Comanches were part of the Shoshone tribe, who lived in the mountains of what is now northern Wyoming and Montana

29. Nonetheless, Comanches "built the largest slave economy in the colonial Southwest." Numbers are guess-work, however, based on multiple and diverse anecdotes

30. The Comanches, exceptional horsemen who dominated the Southern Plains, played a prominent role in Texas frontier history throughout much of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

31. ‘As with Comanches and horses, some Navajos acquired far more sheep than others, a development that led to the emergence of a nascent class system and even to distinct band identities.’ ‘In 1835, one traveler to Texas heard an echo of what seems to have been early contact between Comanches and African Americans in South Texas.’

32. Initially, in and around New Mexico, Comanches took captives as they warred on Apaches, Pueblo Indians, other indigenous peoples, and Spanish and mestizo colonists.

33. Comanche Location Before contact, the Comanches were part of the southern groups of Eastern Shoshoni that lived near the upper reaches of the Platte River in eastern Wyoming

34. Case in point: The Comanches. This Native American nation was once the most powerful in America—and one of the most effective fighting forces in history, hands down

35. In the late 1880s and early 1890s a small group of Lipan Apaches moved from New Mexico to Oklahoma and brought a new peyote ritual to the Comanches.

36. After Texas Indian agents had taken over administration of the Wichita Agency in Oklahoma, Comanches participated an attack on the agency (October, 1862) by pro-Union Delaware and Shawnee from Kansas

37. Fehrenbach traces the Comanches' rise to power, from their prehistoric origins to their domination of the high plains for more than a century until their demise in the face of Anglo-American expansion.

38. Texas Ranger Jake Cutter arrests gambler Paul Regret, but soon finds himself teamed with his prisoner in an undercover effort to defeat a band of renegade arms merchants and thieves dealing with the Comanches known as Comancheros.

39. Both books are terrific and neither one is a substitute for the other: Gwynne's book is a history of the Comanches' hostile relations first with the Spanish civilization spreading northward from Mexico and then with Euro-American settlers arriving from the east.

40. Ed Sweeney, author of the definitive work on the Apache Wars, From Cochise to Geronimo: The Chiricahua Apaches, 1874-1886, says, “I have never encountered one incident where Apaches raped their female captives.It was a common act among some of the Plains Indians, the Comanches, Cheyennes and Kiowas.”

41. He has rescued the Comanches from myth and distortion and given them their due in the sprawling epic that is our American story."—John Sledge, Mobile Press-Register (AL) " The Comanche Empire is a hugely important documentary survey of the Comanche Nation, as known from documentary sources between the late 17th and the late 19th centuries