Wikipedia
Mulock may refer to:
- Al Mulock (1926–1968), Canadian actor
- Dinah Mulock alias Dinah Craik (1826–1887), English novelist and poet
- George Mulock DSO (1882–1963), British naval officer, Antarctic surveyor and explorer
- Redford Henry Mulock (1886–1961), Canadian flying ace of World War I
- Ron Mulock (1930–2014), Australian politician
- T. J. Mulock (born 1985), Canadian-German professional ice hockey forward
- Tyson Mulock (born 1983), Canadian professional ice hockey centre
- William Mulock, PC, KCMG, MP, QC, LL.D (1843–1944), Canadian lawyer, politician, judge and philanthropist
- William Pate Mulock, PC (1897–1954), Canadian politician
Places:
- Mulock Glacier, glacier in Antarctica
- Mulock Inlet, re-entrant between Capes Teall and Lankester
- Mulock, Ontario, municipality of West Grey, Ontario
See also:
- Sir William Mulock Secondary School, secondary school in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada
Usage examples of "mulock".
Indian terms taken directly into English by the first colonists come from the two eastern families: the Iroquois confederacy, whose members included the Mohawk, Cherokee, Oneida, Seneca, Delaware and Huron tribes, and the even larger Algonquian group, which included Algonquin, Arapaho, Cree, Delaware, Illinois, Kickapoo, Narragansett, Ojibwa, Penobscot, Pequot and Sac and Fox, among many others.
Bad stories came down about Blackfeet and Cree, Atsina and Crow and Nakodabi Assiniboin, becoming crazed on spirit water and hurting or killing each other.
Bay, sitting next to a fire, holding a royal warrant from King Charles I and waiting for the Assiniboine and Cree to bring in a fresh pile of beaver pelts he could benevolently exchange for a few barrels of flour and sugar.
To either side of the city, vast stretches of the tall musical reeds, the Anche, that gave the major country of Aulos its name, tossed in the afternoon wind, but their song and the high-pitched cree of a wheeling flock of blue-backed harks was lost in the distance and the hubbub of the crowd.
MERCHANT PRINCES their retinues came from every corner of the HBCs former empire-Swampy Cree from Hudson and James bays, Saulteaux from Lake Winnipeg, Ojibwas from the Nipigon country, Sioux from the Portage Plains, and mighty warriors from the Peace and Athabasca valleys.
I am assured by the best interpreters in the country, that it bears no affinity to the Cree, Sioux, or Chipewyan languages.
Once the Hares had been hunted by the Crees--he thought it was the Crees, his own people, but it might have been the Dogribs.
The name Knisteneaux, Kristeneaux, or Killisteneaux, was anciently applied to a tribe of Crees, now termed Maskegons, who inhabit the river Winipeg.
Cherokee alphabet, of the Mohawk, the Blackfoot, the Cree, the Lakota, the Potawatomi, and others.
Much confusion has arisen from the great variety of names, applied without discrimination to the various tribes of Saulteurs and Crees.
Crees lolled in their wigwams, when less labor fell to Siena, he set traps in the snow trails for silver fox and marten.
When the Crees all fall like leaves in autumn, then Siena and his people will go back to the north.
Penobscot, Algonquin, Huron, Ojibway, Mohawk, Yakima, Okanagan, Tlingit, Chinook, Beaver, Tanana, Cree, Bannock, Crow, Shoshone, Cheyenne.
When they saw that, the Crees rushed at Torrey, and the Trappers had to shoot fast to save him.
In the white man's school, we learned that these folk were called the Athabascans and the Crees.