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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Pueblo Indians

Pueblo \Pueb"lo\, n. [Sp., a village, L. populus people. See People.] A communistic building erected by certain Indian tribes of Arizona and New Mexico. It is often of large size and several stories high, and is usually built either of stone or adobe. The term is also applied to any Indian village in the same region.

Pueblo Indians (Ethnol.), any tribe or community of Indians living in pueblos. The principal Pueblo tribes are the Moqui, the Zu[~n]i, the Keran, and the Tewan.

Wikipedia
Pueblo Indians (baseball)

The Pueblo Indians were a minor league baseball team that was located in Pueblo, Colorado and played in the Western League sporadically from 1900–1911.

A Pueblo franchise had previously played in the Colorado State League on and off from 1885–1898 and they joined the second Western League when it formed in 1900 but folded that season. The name returned when the Colorado Springs Millionaires moved to town and became the Indians in 1905, and they remained active until 1909. In 1911 the Wichita Jobbers moved to Pueblo and finished out the season as the Indians. This team moved to the Rocky Mountain League in 1912 but quickly moved to Trinidad during the season.

Usage examples of "pueblo indians".

There were also some twelve thousand more-or-less tame Pueblo Indians.

Hoping to speed up matters, he hired a dozen Chamisaville Pueblo Indians to help with the digging.

Next we doubled back through New Mexico, where Pueblo Indians dwell in a living museum of anthropology.

The little black and red ones were more primitive, what the Pueblo Indians had always raised.

Then the mountains and the funny little adobe huts and the Pueblo Indians along the line made me forget everything else.

The Pueblo Indians once worshipped such a stone, and one appears in the oral traditions of the Maori of New Zealand.

The Hopis and the Pueblo Indians, neighbors to the Navajo, had rain dances in their rituals.

The floor was covered in shabby linoleum, and the walls were hung with murals of Southwestern Pueblo Indians grinding corn, weaving, and stalking deer.