[eθnə'gra:fikəl]
ethnographical如何读
ethnographical是什么意思
- adj.民族志学的
ethnographical英英释义
Adjective
1. of or relating to ethnography;
"ethnographical data"
ethnographical词源英文解释
French ethnographie, from ethno- + -graphie -graphy
The first known use of ethnography was in 1811
ethnographical 例句
1 The Greeks even adopted the name “Romans,” which gradually became so closely identified with them as to supersede the name “Hellenes”; and thus a political was gradually converted into an ethnographical and linguistic designation.
2 If we look at the results of all these migrations and ethnographical mixtures, we have first to notice the14 stratifications of English society according to rank.
3 Such tides as set towards the Himalaya broke against their farther buttresses, leaving an interesting ethnographical flotsam in the northern valleys; but they never overflowed the Himalayan barrier.
4 Having noticed the most remarkable physical distinctions of the human race, we come to its ethnographical divisions—divisions founded partly upon traditional and historical records, and partly upon the internal evidence of similarity of language.
5 Human marketers then conduct qualitative research through in-depth interviews and ethnography.
6 But this is only an ethnographical enumeration of the schools of the eighteenth century.
7 Trips back to Mexico have taught her about ethnography and indigenous lineage, which has led to a rich exchange of ideas between mother and daughter, as well as bodies of work that keep these creative traditions alive.
8 Everywhere we find the same types, even in ethnographical pictures.
9 At the very least, seeing films from all over the world provided a kind of cinematic passport: If the international fare was not always excellent, the ethnography was.
10 This nationalistic, ethnographical aesthetic which they persisted in cultivating was not in reality far removed from the spirit which inspired those films one sees of the old Russia of the tsars and boyars.
11 There are, besides, the examination of the flora and fauna in those countries, hitherto unknown in this respect, ethnographical researches, hydrographical work, etc.
12 In this book of a purely historical, literary, and cultural character must be excluded all that refers to the physiological and ethnographical characteristics of the Teutonic woman and of her Slavic sister.
13 The ethnographical facts which I present are not subsequent justification of generalizations otherwise obtained.
14 "It is the best map that we know of," said Bismarck, and Kiepert's ethnographical statements were completely adopted by British scientists and diplomats at the time of the Berlin Congress.
15 From Thucydides he probably borrowed the idea of his introductions, the imaginary speeches and the character portraits; from Cato the picturesque descriptions of the scenes of historical events and the ethnographical digressions.’—Cook.
16 It will thus appear that nothing like an ethnographical distribution of tribes has been attempted; and, indeed, these distinctions have long ceased, with the Indians themselves, to be of the slightest significance.
17 Thus to comprehend the full significance of the Book of Exodus we must study the geographical and ethnographical condition of Egypt.
18 Many parts hitherto unsurveyed were charted by them, and valuable knowledge as to the ethnographical and geological conditions of the islands was obtained.
19 The present article is confined to a consideration of the ethnographical relations and characteristics of the people, their history being treated under Caucasia.
20 As part of his ethnographical research into hidden aspects of cities he joined a group of trespassers called London Consolidation Crew.