Ethnology, Volume 19University of Pittsburgh, 1980 - Anthropology |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 28
Page 101
... received the money for the land from defendant . Therefore , the latter had received the land and it was not the complainant's fault that someone else was using the land . Most of the committee members agreed that the defendant had ...
... received the money for the land from defendant . Therefore , the latter had received the land and it was not the complainant's fault that someone else was using the land . Most of the committee members agreed that the defendant had ...
Page 103
... received money from the latter , and agreed to transfer the land after the coffee and other crops had been harvested . There were cactus plants demarcating the boundary between the seller's land and the road that was eventually to be ...
... received money from the latter , and agreed to transfer the land after the coffee and other crops had been harvested . There were cactus plants demarcating the boundary between the seller's land and the road that was eventually to be ...
Page 341
... received them . Others , including practically all Qashqa'i in the lower economic levels and those who were not well integrated in tribal groups , were legally forbidden use of pastureland . In this same period , the government removed ...
... received them . Others , including practically all Qashqa'i in the lower economic levels and those who were not well integrated in tribal groups , were legally forbidden use of pastureland . In this same period , the government removed ...
Contents
Volume XIX Number | 1 |
MAYORUNA PANOAN KINSHIP I | 11 |
THE MANIPULATION OF KPELLE SOCIAL | 29 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achiote agnate Aguaruna Ain al-Qasis ambiguity andē animals Anthropology behavior brideservice bridewealth cash cent child Chinantec cognate committee context cultivation cultural daughter disputes divorce dyad economic Eskimo ethnographic father fatherhood female husband fertility full sibling garden girl Goyigama herding household individuals Kadara Kagoro kinship kinsmen kintypes Kpelle Kukulewa land landlords lineal live LOC NUM CLU Lower Chinook Machiguenga male husband manioc marital marriage married Mayoruna monogamous mortgage mother NAME LOC Nandi nantag norms Otomí Pantelleria parents participate pastoral patrilineal pattern peasants plants polygynous polygynous unions production Pul Eliya Qashqa'i reciprocal labor relations relationship relative renom responsibility ritual role rotating credit associations sample secondary marriage sexual shepherds social stress societies song duel status structure susto susto illness tanda tenant Tenino tion traditional tribal variga Veddas village wife wife's Wishram wives woman woman/woman marriage women Zapotec