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MétisHistorically, the term Métis referred to the children of French fur traders and their Cree wives on the Prairies, of English and Scottish traders and Dene women in the North, and of Inuit and British [..]
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MétisMetadata information system.METIS is a UN/ECE initiative primarily focused on the development of a consensus on conceptual issues and the development of guidelines in relation to statistical metadata, [..]
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Métisfirst wife of Zeus, from Greek Metis, literally "advice, wisdom, counsel; cunning, skill, craft," from PIE root *me- "to measure" (see meter (n.2)).
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Métis"person of mixed parentage," especially French Canadian and North American Indian, from French métis, from Late Latin mixticus "of mixed race," from Latin mixtus "mixed," [..]
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Métispeople and culture native to Canada, who trace their ancestry to European and indigenous heritage.
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Métiscunning (Odysseus)
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MétisA French term meaning "mixed blood" that is used in Canada to refer to people whose ancestry is a mix of Plains Indian and French Canadian or Scottish.
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MétisPeople of First Nations and European descent. Their culture thrives from the diversity of their ancestry, which includes Scottish, French, Ojibwa and Cree.
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Métis(n) a person in western Canada who is of Caucasian and American Indian ancestry
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Métis French term meaning "mixed blood." The Canadian Constitution recognizes Métis people as one of the three Aboriginal Peoples. The term is used broadly to describe people with mixed First Nat [..]
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MétisMétis refers to a person who is of mixed First Nation and European ancestry. The Métis Nation Governing Members have formalized a national citizenship definition that is defined as a person who self-i [..]
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MétisToday, the term is used broadly to describe people with mixed First Nations and European ancestry who identify themselves as Métis, distinct from Indian people, Inuit, or non-Aboriginal people (Métis [..]
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MétisThe name used in Canada and some parts of the northern United States to described people of mixed North American Indian-European descent. Although mixed marriages occurred throughout much of the early [..]
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MétisThis is the French word for "mixed blood". The Constitution Act of 1982 recognizes Métis as one of the three Aboriginal Peoples. Historically, the term Métis applied to the children of French fur traders and Cree women in the Prairies, of English and Scottish traders, and Dene women in the north, and Inuit and British in Newfoundland and [..]
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MétisIn its most general meaning, the term refers to a person of mixed Indian and non-Indian descent. In Canadian history, it was apparently first used very early in the 19th century (along with other terms including “halfbreed”, “brulè”, or “bois-brulè”, “chicot”, “native” and “country-born”) to refer specifically to members of distinct communities of [..]
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MétisMeans "wisdom, skill, cunning" in Greek. In Greek mythology she was a Titan. Because it was prophesized that her children would be wiser than Zeus, he swallowed her after he had impr [..]
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