pastoralist|pastoralists in English

noun

['pæstrəlɪst /'pɑːs-]

writer of poetry about shepherds; shepherd, one who herds livestock

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

1. Approximately 76% of local residents are urban dwellers; the remainder are pastoralists.

2. Under these limitations, it was impossible for people to be pastoralists, agriculturists or city builders.”

3. The Bedouin used to be pastoralist nomads and so they had to be mobile and lived in tents

4. There’s some dispute as to why pastoralist John Ross named the area Cracow back in 1851.

5. Such access is especially important for vulnerable groups, including forest dwellers, pastoralists, indigenous peoples and women

6. Backgrounding arrangements may vary depending on the level of risk the Backgrounding provider and the pastoralist are willing to negotiate and agree on

7. Pastoralists were left with no animals, their source of income and farmers were deprived of their working animals for ploughing and irrigation.

8. Unlike the band organization of most foragers, food producers, either horticulturalists or pastoralists, are politically organized into either tribes, associated with big men, or Chiefdoms, associated with chiefs.Both tribes and Chiefdoms have the basic traits of horticulture (or pastoralists if herders); however the sociopolitical structure can be quite different.

9. The early Arabs of the Arabian Peninsula were predominantly nomadic pastoralists who herded their sheep, goats, and camels through the harsh desert environment

10. The name of the breed comes from the Iranian tribe of Alani, nomadic pastoralists who arrived in Spain as part of the Migration Period in the 5th Century.

11. We now have in the violent Horn of Africa pastoralists planning their grazing to mimic nature and openly saying it is the only hope they have of saving their families and saving their culture.

12. Ahasuerus - balladeer - balladist - Bucoliast - itinerant - major poet - minor poet - modernist - peregrine - rhymester - serenader - sonneteer - straggler - symbolist - trovatore 10 letter words folk singer - librettist - parnassian - rhapsodist - troubadour 11 letter words ballad maker - minnesinger - pastoralist - peripatetic …

13. Aramaean (plural Aramaeans) Any member of a West Semitic semi-nomadic and pastoralist people who lived in the Levant and later also in upper Mesopotamia (Biblical Aram) during the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age.

14. Pastoralists arrived in the area shortly afterward with Charles Brockman setting up Boolathana Station in 1877 and the region experienced success in wool production until the 1930s when the overgrazing, drought and the great depression caused most businesses to fail.

15. Hutu, also called Bahutu or Wahutu, Bantu-speaking people of Rwanda and Burundi.Numbering about 9,500,000 in the late 20th century, the Hutu comprise the vast majority in both countries but were traditionally subject to the Tutsi (q.v.), warrior-pastoralists of Nilotic stock.

16. The Aramaeans, also Arameans (Greek: Ἀραμαῖοι), were a Northwest Semitic semi-nomadic and pastoralist people who originated in what is now modern Syria (Biblical Aram) during the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age. Large groups migrated to Mesopotamia where they intermingled with the native Akkadian (Assyrian and Babylonian) population.

17. The Berbers, or Berber, has a number of meanings, including a language, a culture, a location, and a group of people: most prominently it is the collective term used for dozens of tribes of pastoralists, indigenous people who herd sheep and goats and live in northwest Africa today.