miami

મિયામી
definition
noun
a city and port in southeastern Florida; population 413,201 (est. 2008). Its subtropical climate and miles of beaches make this and the resort island of Miami Beach, separated from the mainland by Biscayne Bay, a year-round holiday resort.
Several tribes, especially the Cherokees and Creeks in the South and the Shawnees, Kickapoos, Miamis , and others north of the Ohio River, held substantial military power.
a member of an American Indian people formerly living mainly in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin and more recently inhabiting areas of Ohio, Kansas, and Oklahoma.
adjective
She turned on the news, which was currently the local news, and watched in disgust as she watched a story about a Miami tribe of Indians wanting to sue a bunch of Illinois land owners for something they didn't do.
relating to the Miami or their language.
example
He had not only married into one of the most hostile tribes of the Great Lakes, the 'Miamis' , but he had also led numerous Indian raids against settlements along the Ohio River and in the Illinois country.
She turned on the news, which was currently the local news, and watched in disgust as she watched a story about a 'Miami' tribe of Indians wanting to sue a bunch of Illinois land owners for something they didn't do.
Though the Kickapoo tribe sold the land to the federal government in 1815, the Miamis argued that the area really wasn't theirs to sell: the 'Miamis' already owned it.
By the spring of 1774, the French in the area conspired against the 'Miamis' and decided they deserved full control over the portage.
The 'Miamis' returned Beaubien's goods to his warehouse.
When de la Balme promised the Creoles a quick remedy and targeted a scapegoat, Charles Beaubien, the British agent to the 'Miamis' , they received him as u2018the Messiah.u2019
Beaubien also rallied the 'Miamis' and traveled with them and the British Lieutenant Governor of Canada, Henry Hamilton, in their attack on Vincennes and Virginian forces in 1778.
The British intended for the 'Miamis' to carry freely across the portage, charging what the market could bear.
Short of turning all the 'Miamis' in the country into Cicelys, it just isn't going to happen in any short order.
The attack the 'Miamis' feared from Vincennes, however, never came.
Several tribes, especially the Cherokees and Creeks in the South and the Shawnees, Kickapoos, 'Miamis' , and others north of the Ohio River, held substantial military power.
Captain Lismahago's encounter with the 'Miamis' and his period of temporary residence with them brings the unstable imperial experience into the centre of the Bramble party travelling through Britain.
The 'Miamis' never expected a renegade like de la Balme.
Though the American presence diminished the power of the 'Miamis' in 1795, Richardville's Kekionga maintained its economic and political sovereignty until the Treaty of Ghent, 1814.
Among the tribes represented were Delawares, Iroquois, Wyandots, 'Miamis' , Ottawas, Pottawattamies, Creeks, Sac and Fox, Choctaw.
De la Balme's raid also seems to have reawakened the 'Miamis' to the very real dangers posed by the American rebels and French Creoles at Vincennes, not only to their goods, but also to their lives.
Credits: Google Translate