Native American. Associated with, special to, or from Native American (Indian) peoples or cultures. You can also see entries assigned to this category.
bellagonna adj. We have talked to the bellagonna (which translates as non-Navajo) manager who says they’re still working towards a waiver to avoid changes. [United StatesNative American] [full cite] (Apr. 7, 2006)
blessing way n. He remembered the Blessing Way held when he and his cousins had left after their last furlough for Camp Pendleton and then for Saigon and Okinawa. He remembered the sweat bath and the Singer, even older than Sandoval, sprinkling his shoulders with the sacred pollen, and the old, cracked voice rising over the rhythm of the pot drum. [EnglishNative American] [full cite] (Sep. 17, 2007)
blessing way n. The informant of the xójợ-djí, or blessing way…had little to say of additional peoples beyond the curt remark that the four clans would meet some relatives iợn the Navaho country.…Their sacred names in the xójợ-djí or blessing way. [EnglishNative American] [full cite] (Sep. 17, 2007)
blessing way n. During pregnancy, one cares for the child by eating right and, to appease the supernaturals, by avoiding prohibited behavior such as tying knots. In addition, one participates in proper rituals, including the Blessing Way, to assure an easy delivery, promote healing, and hasten the return to harmony. [EnglishNative AmericanReligion] [full cite] (Sep. 17, 2007)
box-checker n. Noley and Chenault have a name for those who would use spurious ties to tribal heritage to further their employment opportunities. They call them “box-checkers.” According to Chenault, some job candidates simply “check the box” for American Indian/Alaskan Native on job forms, hoping to be identified as minority faculty and thus reap the benefits of any available affirmative action plans.…Far more objectionable than those who simply “check the box” are the “mock checkers,” says Noley. The term refers to those in academic programs who not only falsely claim tribal affiliation but also set themselves up as official purveyors of American Indian culture and religion. [EnglishNative AmericanDerogatory] [full cite] (Jan. 24, 2007)
chiefing n. Among coastal Indian tribes, who depend upon tourism, it is not uncommon to see them dressed as Plains Indians with full feathered headdresses and other outfits that were never their custom. It is a practice known as “chiefing,“ and in some tribes it is as regulated as jewelry sales. This is the market force, ethnic-wise: coastal Indians know that they have to look like an outsider’s vision of an Indian in order to be accepted by tourists as Indian. [EnglishNative American] [full cite] (Aug. 28, 2005)
grandfather n. During the purification ceremonies, anywhere from four to 20 people would pack into the tarp-covered huts. The lava rocks, or grandfathers as they are called, have already been burning for hours in the wood burner. [EnglishNative American] [full cite] (Aug. 21, 2005)
in-law chaser n. Perhaps $714 million wouldn’t sound like a bad price if the politicians had to brave what the Navajos call an “in-law chaser” blowing snow into a virtual white-out at gusts up to 50 mph, just so their animals could drink—especially if they knew that the water they were hauling was going to freeze into ice before morning and they could count on the next day being a repeat performance. [EnglishEnvironmentNative AmericanSlang] [full cite] (Sep. 22, 2007)
in-law chaser n. Theresa felt warmed coming inside, away from the snowy, blowing spring storm.—Theresa overhead that the storm was an in-law chaser and giggled about that. It was the middle of the night but perhaps the son-in-law ran around right now or will run around in the early morning before work check-in, chasing after the chopping of wood and gathering the food and the water and the generator gas! [EnglishEnvironmentNative AmericanRelationshipsSlang] [full cite] (Sep. 25, 2007)