Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A member of a Native American people formerly inhabiting parts of Idaho, northern Utah, eastern Oregon, and western Montana, with a present-day population mostly in southeast Idaho.
- noun A member of a Native American people formerly inhabiting the Great Basin area of Idaho, Utah, and Nevada south to Death Valley, California, with a present-day population mostly in Nevada.
- noun A member of a Native American people inhabiting the Wind River valley of western Wyoming.
- noun Any of the Uto-Aztecan languages of any of the Shoshone peoples.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- proper noun An
Amerind ethnic group ofNorth America , especially ofWyoming andIdaho . - proper noun The
Uto-Aztecan language spoken by the Shoshone people. - proper noun The Shoshone National Forest in Wyoming.
- noun A member of this people.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a member of the North American Indian people (related to the Aztecs) of the southwestern United States
- noun the language spoken by the Shoshone (belonging to the Uto-Aztecan family)
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
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Examples
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By CAROLE CLOUDWALKER Staff writer A Colorado man camping with his family at Big Game Campground in Shoshone Forest was attacked by an emaciated male mountain lion on Sunday evening, July 12.
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Then he chased after the ambulance on the slick highway, pulling into the LDS Church parking lot in Shoshone 20 minutes after the ambulance did.
Medpundit 2004
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Then he chased after the ambulance on the slick highway, pulling into the LDS Church parking lot in Shoshone 20 minutes after the ambulance did.
Archive 2004-05-01 2004
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You had to ask for it by name and it wasn't listed on their table; but, if you knew it was there and I got word from a little birdie to ask for the "Shoshone" - which apparently caused the fine folks pouring beer much amusement they would pour a wonderfully sour and refreshing dark Flanders Red.
Archive 2009-08-01 2009
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You had to ask for it by name and it wasn't listed on their table; but, if you knew it was there and I got word from a little birdie to ask for the "Shoshone" - which apparently caused the fine folks pouring beer much amusement they would pour a wonderfully sour and refreshing dark Flanders Red.
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“They were called Sheepeaters for the obvious reason that wild sheep were the mainstay of their diet, but they were more commonly known as the Shoshone Indians.”
Ride the Thunder Janet Dailey 1980
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“They were called Sheepeaters for the obvious reason that wild sheep were the mainstay of their diet, but they were more commonly known as the Shoshone Indians.”
Ride the Thunder Janet Dailey 1980
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“They were called Sheepeaters for the obvious reason that wild sheep were the mainstay of their diet, but they were more commonly known as the Shoshone Indians.”
Ride the Thunder Janet Dailey 1980
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“They were called Sheepeaters for the obvious reason that wild sheep were the mainstay of their diet, but they were more commonly known as the Shoshone Indians.”
Ride the Thunder Janet Dailey 1980
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Here an aide informed the President that the Ute, of which the Shoshone were a segment, had indeed fought the Arapaho for a century, and it was true that the Arapaho did eat dogs.
Centennial Michener, James 1974
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