tuareg|tuaregs in English

noun

member of a Berber people inhabiting western and central Sahara

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

1. The Berbers’ basic tribal groups are Tamazight, Riff, Shluh, Tuareg, and Kabyll

2. Tuareg music and dance are popular in Ghadames and the south.

3. Burkinabe Tuareg groups blame asylum seekers, bandits, or other Tuareg groups coming from Mali and Niger for increased insecurity in the region and for unjustifiably contributing to a negative

4. The imzad is a single-string Bowed instrument used by the Tuareg people in Africa

5. In reality these borders are not controlled by the Government but by Tuareg people and Toubou people.

6. Armed opposition wracked the Sahelian north when the Tuareg and allied groups of the Dori region ended their truce with the government.

7. Short history of Berber political movements and groups, Berberists, Berber human right activists, Berberism, and Berber political prisoners; Tuareg rebel groups and fronts, Provisional Government of Kabylia; Libyan & Algerian political movements, Amazigh World Congress, IRCAM, political parties and groups in North Africa, Libya, Algeria, Morocco, Tuareg, imazighen, Tamazight, Berber uprising

8. But his three Tuareg assistants stuck to their hooded Burnouses and the tagelmust, the 6ft length of fabric wound into a turban and face cover

9. The Libyco-Berber script is used today in the form of Tifinagh to write the Tuareg languages, which belong to the Berber branch of the Afroasiatic family

10. In 2012, Tuareg and other peoples in northern Mali's Azawad region started an insurgency in the north under the banner of the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad.

11. "Animals are everything to a Tuareg, " an elderly nomad once explained to me. "We drink their milk, we eat their meat, we use their skin, we trade them.

12. Some of their cheeks are stained with indigo dye from their turbans, an age-old mark of the Tuareg that led early visitors to dub them the "blue men."

13. The National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), an organization fighting to make this area of Mali an independent homeland for the Tuareg people, had taken control of the region by April 2012.

14. The garments is known by various names in different ethnic groups and languages that adopted it from the original babban riga of the Hausa People, called agbada in Yoruba, Boubou from Wolof mbubb, mbubb in Wolof, k'sa or gandora in Tuareg, darra'a in Maghrebi Arabic, grand Boubou in various French-speaking West African countries and the English term gown.