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Etymologies
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Examples
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Macos Martin really does a great job at making Steve look so frail and skinny like he could break like a twig.
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On entering, again, the mountains which adjoin the cataracts of the Orinoco, you find among the Piroas, the Macos, and the Macquiritares, milder manners, a love of agriculture, and remarkable cleanliness in the interior of their cabins.
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, Number 361, November, 1845. Various
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I was again struck, as I had been among the Salives and the Macos, with the little uniformity of features to be found among the
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To the east of the Orinoco, between the neighbouring sources of the Caura, Cataniapo, and Ventuari, live the Macos, the
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Higher up, on the west, lie the Mariata and the Manipiare, inhabited by the Macos and
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In the American idioms, which are notwithstanding rich, the moon is commonly enough called the sun of night or even the sun of sleep; but the moon and sun very rarely bear the same name, as among the Macos.
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Leaving the embarcadero, we immediately passed the mouth of the Cataniapo, a small river, the banks of which are inhabited by the Macos, or Piaroas, who belong to the great family of the
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Macos, and the Maquiritaras, milder manners, a love of agriculture, and great cleanliness in the interior of their huts.
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We visited with the missionary the huts of Macos, whom the Spaniards call Piraoas, and those of the
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Zerepe, who was a native of Maypures, had been brought up in the woods by his parents, who were of the tribe of the Macos.
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