Native Definition–adjective | 1. | being the place or environment in which a person was born or a thing came into being: one's native land. | | 2. | belonging to a person by birth or to a thing by nature; inherent: native ability; native grace. | | 3. | belonging by birth to a people regarded as indigenous to a certain place, esp. a preliterate people: Native guides accompanied the expedition through the rain forest. | | 4. | of indigenous origin, growth, or production: native pottery. | | 5. | of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the indigenou
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s inhabitants of a place or country: native customs; native dress. | | 6. | born in a particular place or country: a native New Yorker. | | 7. | of or pertaining to a language acquired by a person before or to the exclusion of any other language: Her native language is Greek. | | 8. | pertaining to or characteristic of a person using his or her native language: a native speaker of English; native command of a language. | | 9. | under the rule of natives: a native government. | | 10. | occupied by natives: the native quarter of Algiers. | | 11. | remaining or growing in a natural state; unadorned or unchanged: the native beauty of a desert island. | <
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td class="dnindex">12. | forming the source or origin of a person or thing: He returned to his native Kansas. | | 13. | originating naturally in a particular country or region, as animals or plants. | | 14. | found in nature rather than produced artificially, as a mineral substance: the difference between native and industrial diamonds. | | 15. | Chemistry, Mineralogy. (of metals) occurring in nature pure or uncombined: native copper. | | 16. | belonging to a person as a birthright: to deprive a person of his native rights. | | 17. | Computers. | a. | designed for use with a specific type of computer: writing native applications for 32-bit PCs. | | b. | internal to a specific application program: to view the file in its native format. | | | 18. | Archaic. closely related, as by birth. | –noun | 19. | one of the people indigenous to a place or country, esp. as distinguished from strangers, foreigners, colonizers, etc.: the natives of Chile. | | 20. | a person born in a particular place or country: a native of Ohio. | | 21. | an organism indigenous to a particular region. | | 22. | British. an oyster reared in British waters, esp. in an artificial bed. | | 23. | Astrology. a person born under a particular planet. | —Idiom | 24. | go native, Informal. to adopt or affect the manners or way of life of a place or environment that is different from one's own, esp. a less developed country: After living on the island for a year, we went native and began to wear the local costume. | | From Dictionary
American Definition–adjective | 1. | of or pertaining to the United States of America or its inhabitants: an American citizen. | | 2. | of or pertaining to North or South America; of the Western Hemisphere: the American continents. | | 3. | of or pertaining to the aboriginal Indians of North and South America, usually excluding the Eskimos, regarded as being of Asian ancestry and marked generally by reddish to brownish skin, black hair, dark eyes, and prominent cheekbones. | –noun | 4. | a citizen of the United States of America. | | 5. | a native or inhabitant of the Western Hemisphere. | | 6. | an Indian of North or South America. | | 8. | a steam locomotive having a four-wheeled front truck, four driving wheels, and no rear truck. | | From Dictionary
Art Definition–noun | 1. | the quality, production, expression, or realm, according to aesthetic principles, of what is beautiful, appealing, or of more than ordinary significance. | | 2. | the class of objects subject to aesthetic criteria; works of art collectively, as paintings, sculptures, or drawings: a museum of art; an art collection. | | 3. | a field, genre, or category of art: Dance is an art. | | 4. | the fine arts collectively, often excluding architecture: art and architecture. | | 5. | any field using the skills or techniques of art: advertising art; industrial art. | | 6. | (in printed matter) illustrative or decorative material: Is there any art with the copy for this story? | | 7. | the principles or methods governing any craft or branch of learning: the art of baking; the art of selling. | | 8. | the craft or trade using these principles or methods. | | 9. | skill in conducting any human activity: a master at the art of conversation. | | 10. | a branch of learning or university study, esp. one of the fine arts or the humanities, as music, philosophy, or literature. | | 11. | arts, | a. | (used with a singular verb ) the humanities: a college of arts and sciences. | | | 12. | skilled workmanship, execution, or agency, as distinguished from nature. | | 13. | trickery; cunning: glib and devious art. | | 14. | studied action; artificiality in behavior. | | 15. | an artifice or artful device: the innumerable arts and wiles of politics. | | 16. | Archaic. science, learning, or scholarship. | | From Dictionary
Work Definition–noun | 1. | exertion or effort directed to produce or accomplish something; labor; toil. | | 2. | something on which exertion or labor is expended; a task or undertaking: The students finished their work in class. | | 3. | productive or operative activity. | | 4. | employment, as in some form of industry, esp. as a means of earning one's livelihood: to look for work. | | 5. | one's place of employment: Don't phone him at work. | | 6. | materials, things, etc., on which one is working or is to work. | | 7. | the result of exertion, labor, or activity; a deed or performance. | | 8. | a product of exertion, labor, or activity: musical works. | | 9. | an engineering structure, as a building or bridge. | | 10. | a building, wall, trench, or the like, constructed or made as a means of fortification. | | 11. | works, | a. | (used with a singular or plural verb ) a place or establishment for manufacturing (often used in combination): ironworks. | | b. | the working parts of a machine: the works of a watch. | | c. | Theology. righteous deeds. | | | 12. | Physics. force times the distance through which it acts; specifically, the transference of energy equal to the product of the component of a force that acts in the direction of the motion of the point of application of the force and the distance through which the point of application moves. | | 13. | the works, Informal. | a. | everything; all related items or matters: a hamburger with the works. | | b. | harsh or cruel treatment: to give someone the works. | | –adjective | 14. | of, for, or
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concerning work: work clothes. | –verb (used without object) | 17. | to be employed, esp. as a means of earning one's livelihood: He hasn't worked for six weeks. | | 18. | to be in operation, as a machine. | | 19. | to act or operate effectively: The pump will not work. The plan works. | | 20. | to attain a specified condition, as by repeated movement: The nails worked loose. | | 21. | to have an effect or influence, as on a person or on the mind or feelings of a person. | | 22. | to move in agit
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ation, as the features under strong emotion. | | 23. | to make way with effort or under stress: The ship works to windward. | | 24. | Nautical. to give slightly at the joints, as a vessel under strain at sea. | | 25. | Machinery. to move improperly, as from defective fitting of parts or from wear. | | 26. | to undergo treatment by labor in a given way: This dough works slowly. | | 27. | to ferment, as a liquid. | –verb (used with object) | 28. | to use or manage (an apparatus, contrivance, etc.): She can work many business machines. | | 29. | to bring about (any result) by or as by work or effort: to work a change. | | 30. | to manipulate or treat by labor: to work butter. | | 31. | to put into effective operation. | | 32. | to operate (a mine, farm, etc.) for productive purposes: to work a coal mine. | | 33. | to carry on operations in (a district or region). | | 34. | to make, fashion, or execute by work. | | 35. | to achieve or win by work or effort: to work one's passage. | | 36. | to keep (a person, a horse, etc.) at work: She works her employees hard. | | 37. | to influence or persuade, esp. insidiously: to work other people to one's will. | | 38. | Informal. to exploit (someone or something) to one's advantage: See if you can work your uncle for a new car. He worked his charm in landing a new job. | | 39. | to make or decorate by needlework or embroidery: She worked a needlepoint cushion. | | 40. | to cause fermentation in. | —Verb phrases | 41. | work in or into, | a. | to bring or put in; add, merge, or blend: The tailor worked in the patch skillfully. Work the cream into the hands until it is completely absorbed. | | b. | to arrange a time or employment for: The dentist was very busy, but said she would be able to work me in late in the afternoon. They worked him into the new operation. | | | 42. | work off, | a. | to lose or dispose of, as by exercise or labor: We decided to work off the effects of a heavy supper by walking for an hour. | | b. | to pay or fulfill by working: He worked off his debt by doing odd jobs. | | | 43. | work on or upon, to exercise influence on; persuade; affect: I'll work on her, and maybe she'll change her mind. | | 44. | work out, | a. | to bring about by work, effort, or action. | | b. | to solve, as a problem. | | c. | to arrive at by or as by calculation. | | d. | to pay (a debt) by working instead of paying money. | | e. | to exhaust, as a mine. | | h. | to amount to (a total or specified figure); add up (to): The total works out to 176. | | i. | to prove effective or successful: Their marriage just didn't work out. | | j. | to practice, exercise, or train, esp. in order to become proficient in an athletic sport: The boxers are working out at the gym tonight. | | | 45. | work over, | a. | to study or examine thoroughly: For my term paper I worked over 30 volumes of Roman history. | | b. | Informal. to beat unsparingly, esp. in order to obtain something or out of revenge: They threatened to work him over until he talked. | | | 46. | work through, to deal with successfully; come to terms with: to work through one's feelings of guilt. | | 47. | work up, | a. | to move or stir the feelings; excite. | | b. | to prepare; elaborate: Work up some plans. | | c. | to increase in efficiency or skill: He worked up his typing sp
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eed to 70 words a minute. | | | 48. | work up to, rise to a higher position; advance: He worked up to the presidency. | —Idioms | 49. | at work, | a. | working, as at one's job: He's at work on a new novel. | | b. | in action or operation: to see the machines at work. | | | 50. | gum up the works, Slang. to spoil something, as through blundering or stupidity: The surprise party was all arranged, but her little brother gummed up the works and told her. | | 51. | in the works, in preparation or being planned: A musical version of the book is in the works. | | 52. | make short work of, to finish or dispose of quickly: We made short work of the chocolate layer cake. | | 53. | out of work, unemployed; jobless: Many people in the area were out of work. | | 54. | shoot the works, Slang. to spend all one's resources: Let's shoot the works and order the crêpes suzette. | | From Dictionary
Related topics from Britannicaart a visual object or experience consciously created through an expression of skill or imagination. The term art encompasses diverse media such as painting, sculpture, printmaking, drawing, decorative ...
art criticism the analysis and evaluation of works of art. More subtly, art criticism is often tied to theory; it is interpretive, involving the effort to understand a particular work of art from a theoretical ...
Detroit Institute of Arts art museum in Detroit, Mich., U.S., noted for its collection of American paintings from the 19th century and its Dutch, Flemish, and Italian paintings from the Renaissance through the Baroque period. ...
National Endowment for the Arts an independent agency of the U.S. government that supports the creation, dissemination, and performance of the arts. It was created by the U.S. Congress in the National Foundation on the Arts and the ...
Native American art The term Native American art covers an extremely broad category, encompassing all art expressions of the original inhabitants of the Americas and their cognate descendants. It thus includes not only ...
jewelry The diverse forms taken by personal ornamentation are related to the type of life led by the numerous ethnic and tribal groups scattered throughout the vast American territory. The most highly ...
Native American art In the contemporary art world, Native American art occupies a peripheral role. Until the last few decades, the only strong effort to exhibit this art in galleries or museums was made by those few ...
Latin American art While religious themes and some portraiture dominated officially commissioned Baroque art in Latin America, native-born artists also began to adapt the lessons of the Baroque to reflect distinctly ...
Arctic William C. Sturtevant (ed.), Handbook of North American Indians, vol. 5, Arctic, ed. by David Damas (1984), is by far the single most important and comprehensive source, with more than 50 articles ...
Canada Sculpture and handicrafts have existed since Canada's earliest history, though it was only in the 20th century that museums and scholars began to take note of important works of art such as the stone ...
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American Academy of Art-Trained T. Allen Lawson Selected for 2008 ...
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Festival celebrates Native American art
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Clinton House Museum to Host Art Exhibit in Honor of Native American ...
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