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Haida

Haida may refer to:

  • the Haida people, an indigenous ethnic group of North America
    • Council of the Haida Nation, their collective government body
    • Haida language, their language
    • Haida argillite carvings, an artform that is a Haida specialty
  • Haida manga, a hybrid art form combining traditional Haida art and Japanese manga

Usage examples of "haida".

He left his science book in the checkroom, along with the scorebook and the basketball, showed his membership card to the cashier, and took a preliminary stroll around the Haida war canoe in the 77th Street lobby.

There was no time to linger at the giant Haida canoe, so he walked straight on through Northwest Coast Indians, past the masks and totem poles and the glass case of nineteen miniature Haidas paddling a miniature canoe.

Down the stairs he flew, through Northwest Coast Indians, the Haida war canoe looming up in the lobby, which was full of people moving toward the exit doors.

Prompt at seven-thirty Reece discovered Lauren in the huge living room, with its vista of mountains and sky, augmented by an expanse of glass, a granite fireplace and a massive Haida carving of a killer whale.

Jimmie, a Haida Indian, had a good boat, and he agreed to take me to Cha-atl, so he and his wife Louisa, Maria and I all started off in the boat.

Reece discovered Lauren in the huge living room, with its vista of mountains and sky, augmented by an expanse of glass, a granite fireplace and a massive Haida carving of a killer whale.

The Haida raged through the forest killing bears, and in the village of the Bear People there was mourning for the loss of life.

Rhpisunt was brought back to the Haida village, where she grew to a great and revered age.

On the coast are the Haida, Tsimshian, Kwakiatl, Nootka, and about the Gulf of Georgia various tribes related to the Salish proper.

We went to the Haida community in the Charlottes, and it was salmon-smoking time.

Above the credenza was a framed print of an Emily Cart painting, depicting a Haida totem pole in a forest on one of the Queen Charlotte Islands.

Canadian maple by the Haida tribe of the Queen Charlotte Islands, south of Alaska.

Groping for the case of miniature Haidas, he crouched down just inside the archway.

The tiny Haidas were clustering around their medicine man, imploring him to explain the giant figure towering above them, the giant hand reaching down to pluck their boat from the water, the giant voice droning from beyond the stars.

The tiny screams intensified, the Haidas clinging for dear life to the sides of their craft like balloonists caught in a thunderstorm.