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Definition of Black Tai
1. Noun. A branch of the Tai languages.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Black Tai
Literary usage of Black Tai
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Journal of American Folk-lore by American Folklore Society (1917)
"The Black Tai believe that after death the soul of the individual is divided, —
one remaining in the house, another resting in the grave, ..."
2. Fishes by David Starr Jordan (1907)
"... Pagrus cardinalis, occurs in Japan in great abundance, as also two species
similar in character but without red, known as Kurodai or black tai. ..."
3. List of the Specimens of Dipterous Insects in the Collection of the British by Francis Walker (1849)
"... foot-cushions pitchy: wings tawny, pale gray at the' and along the hind borders;
wing-ribs tawny ; veins black, tai towards the base ; tip cross-vein ..."
4. Handbook of Birds of the Western United States: Including the Great Plains by Florence Merriam Bailey (1921)
"... feet and ring around eye red head and upper neck white back sooty gray,
secondarie, tipped with white; prima ries and tail black, tai tipped with white; ..."
5. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"... —the red tai, caught in rivers with Bandy beds, and the black tai, found at
the mouths of streams where the darker soil of the sea bed commences. ..."
6. The Plough, the Loom, and the Anvil (1855)
"ground than any other blood horses, aud gather more quickly. They \к generally
of a dappled grey, or dark brown color, with a short, black tai! ¡ltd mane. ..."
7. The Journal of American Folk-lore by American Folklore Society (1917)
"The Black Tai believe that after death the soul of the individual is divided, —
one remaining in the house, another resting in the grave, ..."
8. Fishes by David Starr Jordan (1907)
"... Pagrus cardinalis, occurs in Japan in great abundance, as also two species
similar in character but without red, known as Kurodai or black tai. ..."
9. List of the Specimens of Dipterous Insects in the Collection of the British by Francis Walker (1849)
"... foot-cushions pitchy: wings tawny, pale gray at the' and along the hind borders;
wing-ribs tawny ; veins black, tai towards the base ; tip cross-vein ..."
10. Handbook of Birds of the Western United States: Including the Great Plains by Florence Merriam Bailey (1921)
"... feet and ring around eye red head and upper neck white back sooty gray,
secondarie, tipped with white; prima ries and tail black, tai tipped with white; ..."
11. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"... —the red tai, caught in rivers with Bandy beds, and the black tai, found at
the mouths of streams where the darker soil of the sea bed commences. ..."
12. The Plough, the Loom, and the Anvil (1855)
"ground than any other blood horses, aud gather more quickly. They \к generally
of a dappled grey, or dark brown color, with a short, black tai! ¡ltd mane. ..."