First Nations
See also: First Nation
English
editPronunciation
editEtymology 1
editNoun
editFirst Nations pl (plural only)
- (Canada) The indigenous peoples of Canada (typically not including Inuit or Metis); Indians.
- 2009, Diarmaid MacCulloch, A History of Christianity, Penguin, published 2010, page 714:
- The prolonged suffering and ghastly deaths of Jesuit missionaries at the hands of hostile First Nations on the borders of the French colonies in Canada in the early seventeenth century rank high in the history of Christian suffering.
- (Canada, less common) The indigenous peoples of any country or region.
- 2006, Scott Simon, "Formosa's First Nations and the Japanese: from colonial rule to postcolonial resistance," Japan Focus, ISSN 1557-4660, [1]:
- As “savages” become soldiers, and soldiers become social activists, the tribe has rapidly developed a First Nations identity as advocates of both stripes mobilize memories of past resistance in different contexts. Whether the state is green or blue, therefore, Taroko memories will continue to shape the relationship between state and tribe.
- 2006, Scott Simon, "Formosa's First Nations and the Japanese: from colonial rule to postcolonial resistance," Japan Focus, ISSN 1557-4660, [1]:
- (Australia) The Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) peoples of Australia.
- 2022, Stephen T. Garnett, Golo Maurer, Georgia E. Garrard, “Why Australian common bird names should respond to societal change”, in Emu: Austral Ornithology, volume 122, number 2, page 150:
- Among the 1692 Australian species and subspecies on the BirdLife Australia Working List V3 (excluding vagrant and introduced taxa [...]), 18.7% derive from unrelated entities (e.g. shrike-tit that is neither shrike nor tit). Just 82 reflect First Nations names for birds (1.6%) or places (3.3%)
Adjective
editFirst Nations (not comparable)
- Alternative form of First Nation