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Definition of Daniel Garrison Brinton
1. Noun. United States anthropologist who was the first to attempt a systematic classification of Native American languages (1837-1899).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Daniel Garrison Brinton
Literary usage of Daniel Garrison Brinton
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1900)
"CONTENTS: Daniel Garrison Brinton (with Plate) Tke Facilities afforded by the
Office of Standard Weights and Measures for the ..."
2. Report of the Proceedings of the Numismatic and Antiquarian Society of (1891)
"Daniel Garrison Brinton, MD AN OBITUARY ADDRESS, BY INMAN HORNER, ... Our late
President, Daniel Garrison Brinton, was born May i3th, 1837, at the homestead ..."
3. The Popular Science Monthly (1891)
"The author of this volume, but twenty-two years old at the time of its appearance,
is the subject of the present sketch—Daniel Garrison Brinton. ..."
4. Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1899)
"Resolved, That we unite in an expression of grief for the death and of reverence
for the memory of our former President, Dr. Daniel Garrison Brinton. ..."
5. Bibliography of the Chinookan Languages (including the Chinook Jargon) by James Constantine Pilling (1893)
"Daniel Garrison Brinton, ethnologist, born in Chester County. Pa., May 13, 1837.
He was graduated at Yale in 1858 and at the Jefferson Medical College in ..."