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Native American leader
Answer for the clue "Native American leader ", 8 letters:
sagamore
Alternative clues for the word sagamore
Word definitions for sagamore in dictionaries
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 3544 Housing Units (2000): 1532 Land area (2000): 3.356184 sq. miles (8.692476 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.152548 sq. miles (0.395097 sq. km) Total area (2000): 3.508732 sq. miles (9.087573 sq. km) FIPS code: 58965 Located within: Massachusetts ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Sagamore may refer to: Sachem or "Sagamore", denoting the head of some Native American tribes Wampatuck (d. 1669), Native American leader known as "Josiah Sagamore" to English settlers
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A chief of one or several Native American tribe(s), especially of the Algonquians. 2 (context obsolete English) A juice used in medicine.
Usage examples of sagamore.
There was clearly a connection between LFA and Sagamore through Doub Steel.
Each time he identified the pattern he was searching for, he pulled the buy order a yellow piece of paper on which was the name of the company in whose shares Sagamore was investing, the number of shares purchased, the date purchased, the brokerage house with which the trade was executed, and the portfolio man ager who had ordered the trade and walked down the hall to the office equipment station and made a photo copy.
There was no one else here, either, and he realized that all must be in the town square for the unusual muster of the sachems, caciques and sagamores.
Behind them were seated the second circle of the phylum caciques, sagamores and noted raiders.
Beyond the sagamores were the full clannsmen and behind them, the women.
Behind them stood the sagamores and renowned raiders, and behind them the multitude of full clannsmen.
Caledonians were on the philosophical side when it came to even such matters as obeying sagamores and caciques during their raids.
The Sagamore is of the high blood of the Delawares, and is the great chief of their Tortoises!
In New England, the Indian chiefs and higher-ups were called sagamores.
Look at the Sagamore, how like a grand Indian chief he sits by the fire.
Though love for the soil which had belonged to his ancestors kept the Sagamore of the Mohicans with a small band of followers who were serving at Edward, under the banners of the English king, by far the largest portion of his nation were known to be in the field as allies of Montcalm.