| 释义 | 
		proper nounPlural Indiosˈɪndɪəʊˈindēˌō A desert city in southern California, south-east of Palm Springs; population 84,443 (est. 2008). 
 nounPlural Indios ˈɪndɪəʊˈindēˌō A member of any of the indigenous peoples of America or eastern Asia in areas formerly subject to Spain or Portugal. (旧时受西班牙、葡萄牙统治的)美洲土著;东亚土著 Example sentencesExamples -  In olden days, Saracens and Indios certainly had a very different experience of the crucifix, and many of today's Christian fundamentalists give plenty of reason to doubt this view.
 -  The photos show my father and his fellow monks always in their habits, so I think they preached, taught the Indios to read the Bible and watched that Commandments were observed.
 -  Luck and timing brought her to a factory town on the American border, just as a company began to set up a special program to include Indios on the assembly line.
 -  Si, I said, an Indio, from a nearly immiscible history.
 -  At age nineteen, I even spent some time in a mission, living with the Indios.
 -  Then he asked her if she was full-blooded Indio?
 -  And, finally, in makeshift and transitional housing Indios lived on the outskirts of town.
 -  But the way Baca addresses his question also implies that to do nothing, that simply to be an Indio is to be a scofflaw.
 
 
 OriginMid 19th century: from Spanish and Portuguese, literally 'Indian'.    proper nounˈindēˌō A desert city in southern California, southeast of Palm Springs; population 84,443 (est. 2008). 
 nounˈindēˌō A member of any of the indigenous peoples of America or eastern Asia in areas formerly subject to Spain or Portugal. (旧时受西班牙、葡萄牙统治的)美洲土著;东亚土著 Example sentencesExamples -  Luck and timing brought her to a factory town on the American border, just as a company began to set up a special program to include Indios on the assembly line.
 -  And, finally, in makeshift and transitional housing Indios lived on the outskirts of town.
 -  The photos show my father and his fellow monks always in their habits, so I think they preached, taught the Indios to read the Bible and watched that Commandments were observed.
 -  In olden days, Saracens and Indios certainly had a very different experience of the crucifix, and many of today's Christian fundamentalists give plenty of reason to doubt this view.
 -  Si, I said, an Indio, from a nearly immiscible history.
 -  Then he asked her if she was full-blooded Indio?
 -  At age nineteen, I even spent some time in a mission, living with the Indios.
 -  But the way Baca addresses his question also implies that to do nothing, that simply to be an Indio is to be a scofflaw.
 
 
 OriginMid 19th century: from Spanish and Portuguese, literally ‘Indian’.     |