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Definition of Sarawakian
1. Adjective. Of or relating to Sarawak or its people. "Sarawakian natives"
2. Noun. A native or inhabitant of Sarawak.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sarawakian
Literary usage of Sarawakian
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Defending the Earth: Abuses of Human Rights and the Environment by Human Rights Watch (Organization), Human Rights Watch (Organization, Natural Resources Defense Council (1992)
"Interviews with Sarawakian representatives, September 24, 1991. See, for
example, "Who are these Penans," by Ken ..."
2. Indivisible Human Rights: The Relationship of Political and Civil Rights to by Human Rights Watch (Organization, Human Rights Watch (Organization) (1992)
"On three recent occasions, local Sarawakian rivalries turned into bloody fights
when the gangsters got involved. One local man had four fingers sliced off ..."
3. Narrative of Events in Borneo and Celebes, Down to the Occupation of Labuan ...by James Brooke, George Rodney Mundy by James Brooke, George Rodney Mundy (1848)
"Sarawakian Chess playing. Intrigues among the Chiefs. Chinese Jars. First Visits
of the Chinese to the Archipelago. Topographical Information. ..."
4. The Savage Life: A Second Series of "Camp Notes" by Frederick Boyle (1876)
"I hope she wasn't, but I respect the warmth and simple honesty of that Sarawakian
confrere. I have no figures as yet for estimating the revenue of in our ..."
5. Natural Religion: The Gifford Lectures Delivered Before the University of by Friedrich Max Müller (1889)
"... and Sarawakian belief that men and women can be turned into plants, is a far
more difficult question to answer, and before we generalise on such matters ..."
6. The Savage Life: A Second Series of "Camp Notes" by Frederick Boyle (1876)
"I hope she wasn't, but I respect the warmth and simple honesty of that Sarawakian
confrere. I have no figures as yet for estimating the revenue of in our ..."
7. Natural Religion: The Gifford Lectures Delivered Before the University of by Friedrich Max Müller (1892)
"... are likewise at the bottom of the Samoan and Sarawakian belief that men and
women can be turned into plants, is a far more difficult question to answer, ..."
8. Defending the Earth: Abuses of Human Rights and the Environment by Human Rights Watch (Organization), Human Rights Watch (Organization, Natural Resources Defense Council (1992)
"Interviews with Sarawakian representatives, September 24, 1991. See, for
example, "Who are these Penans," by Ken ..."
9. Indivisible Human Rights: The Relationship of Political and Civil Rights to by Human Rights Watch (Organization, Human Rights Watch (Organization) (1992)
"On three recent occasions, local Sarawakian rivalries turned into bloody fights
when the gangsters got involved. One local man had four fingers sliced off ..."
10. Narrative of Events in Borneo and Celebes, Down to the Occupation of Labuan ...by James Brooke, George Rodney Mundy by James Brooke, George Rodney Mundy (1848)
"Sarawakian Chess playing. Intrigues among the Chiefs. Chinese Jars. First Visits
of the Chinese to the Archipelago. Topographical Information. ..."
11. The Savage Life: A Second Series of "Camp Notes" by Frederick Boyle (1876)
"I hope she wasn't, but I respect the warmth and simple honesty of that Sarawakian
confrere. I have no figures as yet for estimating the revenue of in our ..."
12. Natural Religion: The Gifford Lectures Delivered Before the University of by Friedrich Max Müller (1889)
"... and Sarawakian belief that men and women can be turned into plants, is a far
more difficult question to answer, and before we generalise on such matters ..."
13. The Savage Life: A Second Series of "Camp Notes" by Frederick Boyle (1876)
"I hope she wasn't, but I respect the warmth and simple honesty of that Sarawakian
confrere. I have no figures as yet for estimating the revenue of in our ..."
14. Natural Religion: The Gifford Lectures Delivered Before the University of by Friedrich Max Müller (1892)
"... are likewise at the bottom of the Samoan and Sarawakian belief that men and
women can be turned into plants, is a far more difficult question to answer, ..."