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seminomadic

a. Partly nomadic.

Usage examples of "seminomadic".

The indigenous humans live in small seminomadic tribal groups called ghosh and avoid the settlements, which are maintained by offworlders of a wide variety of species.

The Hooded Men were seminomadic, herdsmen and hunters spending much of the summer on the move after game or pasturage.

Some of these people are primarily water buffalo herders and lead a seminomadic life.

At the same time, approximately 95,000 persons were identified in the 1977 census as nomadic or seminomadic beduins.

Sheep and goats were tended primarily by nomadic and seminomadic groups.

The pastoralists and seminomadic tribespeople who had once driven their camels and cattle through the area had another view, but it did not appear to count for much because their lifestyles disfranchised them from the politics of a nation struggling desperately to modernize.

Mesoamericans were seminomadic, appearing in Central America around 4000 BC.

They had quickly found humans among the seminomadic tribes of those regions who were willing to interpret the universe to the mind-hungry Ulanyi embryos.

The Sosa arrived as refugees, driven from their homeland by invaders, at about the same time the seminomadic Astasa began to settle down in the grazing lands of Obtry.

Instead, Australian Aborigines were nomadic or seminomadic hunter-gatherers, organized into bands, living in temporary shelters or huts, and still dependent on stone tools.