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Definition of Hualpai
1. Noun. A member of a North American people formerly living in the Colorado river valley in Arizona.
2. Noun. The Yuman language spoken by the Walapai.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Hualpai
Literary usage of Hualpai
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Guidebook of the Western United States: Part C. The Santa Fe Route with a by Nelson Horatio Darton (1915)
"View northward from north end of Hualpai Mountains near track of Santa Fe Railway.
... B. EDGE OF DESERT PLAIN ON WEST SIDE OF Hualpai MOUNTAINS, ARIZ. ..."
2. Bulletin by Geological Survey (U.S.) (1915)
"At the south end of the Hualpai Valley, south of Berry siding and east of ...
On the west side of Hualpai Valley, as seen from points between Hack- berry ..."
3. Statistics of Mines and Mining in the States and Territories West of the by United States Dept. of the Treasury, Rossiter Worthington Raymond (1872)
"Sacramento or Hualpai district.—This is the only mining district in Mojave County in
... The Hualpai Valley, east of the range, and Long Valley, west of it, ..."
4. Guidebook of the Western United States by Geological Survey (U.S.) (1915)
"From Antares to Kingman the railway ascends Hualpai (wahl'pie) Valley, ...
At the south end of the Hualpai Valley, south of Berry siding and east of Louise ..."
5. Silver and Gold: an Account of the Mining and Metallurgical Industry of the by Rossiter Worthington Raymond (1873)
"The principal new discoveries were made in the Bradshaw, the Hualpai or Sacramento,
... Early in this year a renewal of prospecting was made in Hualpai or ..."
6. Statistics of Mines and Mining in the States and Territories West of the by Rossiter Worthington Raymond (1872)
"Sacramento or Hualpai district.—This is the only mining district in Mojave County in
... The Hualpai Valley, east of the range, and Long Valley, west of it, ..."
7. Mineral Deposits of the Cerbat Range, Black Mountains, and Grand Wash Cliffs by Frank Charles Schrader (1909)
"As suggested by Lee, this fault probably extends through the valley and is
continuous with that west of the Hualpai Mountains. ..."
8. Indian Affairs: Laws and Treaties by United States, Charles Joseph Kappler (1904)
"... and the same is hereby, set aside and reserved for the use and occupancy of
the Hualpai Indians, namely: Beginning at a point on the Colorado River 5 ..."