¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Nomads
1. nomad [n] - See also: nomad
Lexicographical Neighbors of Nomads
Literary usage of Nomads
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Influences of Geographic Environment, on the Basis of Ratzel's System of by Ellen Churchill Semple (1911)
"... but soon they had to yield to another tribe of pastoral nomads, ... predatory
nomads of the French Sahara just north of Lake Chad and the River Yo, ..."
2. Influences of Geographic Environment, on the Basis of Ratzel's System of by Ellen Churchill Semple (1911)
"Mental and moral qualities of nomads. the transition to agriculture, ...
Asiatic nomads have sparsely disseminated the culture of China, Persia, ..."
3. A Guide to the Study of Medieval History for Students, Teachers, and Libraries by Louis John Paetow (1917)
"They serve as a buffer between the Teutonic west and the Asiatic nomads. ...
Enslavement of the Slavs by Teutons and Asiatic nomads. ..."
4. The Earth and Its Inhabitants by Élisée Reclus (1893)
"The nomads of these districts belong to various races. ... nomads. These nomads,
allied to the Trarza and Brakna tribes on the right bank of tho Senegal, ..."
5. The History of Herodotus by Herodotus, George Campbell Macaulay (1904)
"In the land of the nomads however there exist none of these, but other animals
as follows :—white-rump antelopes, gazelles, buffaloes, asses, ..."
6. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1891)
"AKCH/EOLOGICAL nomads IN ... whilst we professed to be archaeological nomads,
who went from one set of ruins to another in search of fresh material ..."
7. Modern Russian Poetry: An Anthology by Babette Deutsch, Avrahm Yarmolinsky (1921)
"... nomads OF BEAUTY " You are artists, nomads of Beauty." —" Flamings."
For you—ancestral acres, And, choked, the graveyard waits. ..."