- The
Kayung totem pole is a 12-metre (39 ft)
totem pole made by the
Haida people.
Carved and
originally located in the
village of
Kayung on
Graham Island...
- Wurm and
Hattori (1981) list
these dialects as
Delang (200,000 speakers),
Kayung (100,000 speakers), Banana’ (100,000 speakers),
Tapitn (300 speakers), Mentebah-Suruk...
- Maya, Aztec,
Taino and
other early cultures are well represented. The
Kayung totem pole,
which was made in the late
nineteenth century on
Haida Gwaii...
- M’n**** Fun Bulol: the
owner of wild
animals Children of D’wata and
Sedek We
Kayung Slew S’mbleng
Nagwawang Nga Hule S’ntan Fu:
spirits that
inhabit and own...
- (non-Native) at
Denver Museum of
Nature and
Science The
Kayung totem pole in 1884 The
Kayung totem pole at the
British Museum Totem poles at the Canadian...
-
Codex Kingsborough Double-headed
serpent Hoa Hakananai'a
Throne of
Weapons Kayung totem pole Tree of Life
Yaxchilan Lintel 24
Ancient Egypt and
Sudan Battlefield...
- Vietnamese: Trắc (or Cẩm lai nam bộ); Khmer: ក្រញូង: Kranhung ; Lao: ກະຍູງ:
Kayung ; Chinese: 酸枝木: Suān zhī mù ) is a
species of
legume in the
family Fabaceae...
-
three separate and
adjoining communities,
Atewaas (Old M****ett)
Jaahguhl Kayung Hlk'yah
GaawGa (Windy Bay) (Lyell Island)
Klinkwan (Kaigani Haida, Prince...
- ')
Pilan means 'how many':
Pilan a kapaya? ('How many papayas?')
Pilan kayung magkaputul? ('How many
children did your
mother birth?')
Kapilan means 'when':...
- that was
repaired with the ****istance of the
Haida citizens of Atewaas,
Kayung and Jaaguhl.
These three villages accepted the gift and
adopted the name...