| American Indian. |
n]
| 1. | Also called American Indian, Amerind, Amerindian, Native American. a member of the aboriginal people of America or of any of the aboriginal North or South American stocks, usually excluding the Eskimos. |
| 2. | any of the indigenous languages of the American Indians. Abbreviation: Ind |
| 3. | a member of any of the peoples native to or inhabiting India or the East Indies. |
| 4. | a citizen of the Republic of India. |
| 5. | Slang. a person who performs a required task or carries out the instructions of superiors: We have too many chiefs and not enough Indians. |
| 6. | Astronomy. the constellation Indus. |
| 7. | of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the American Indians or their languages. |
| 8. | of, pertaining to, or characteristic of India or the East Indies. |
| 9. | made of Indian corn: Indian meal. |
| 10. | Zoogeography. oriental (def. 3). |
| 11. | Phytogeography. belonging or pertaining to a geographical division comprising India south of the Himalayas, and Pakistan and Sri Lanka. |
Am·er·in·di·an (ām'ə-rĭn'dē-ən) n. An American Indian. See Usage Note at American Indian. [Amer(ican) + Indian.] Am'er·in'di·an, Am'er·ind' adj., Am'er·in'dic adj. Usage Note: The contractions Amerindian and Amerind occur infrequently in modern American English, especially with reference to the Native American peoples of the United States and Canada. They are somewhat more common in anthropological contexts or when used of the native peoples of the Caribbean and Central and South America. |
"An Indian gift is a proverbial expression, signifying a present for which an equivalent return is expected." [Thomas Hutchinson, "History of Massachusetts Bay," 1765]Meaning "one who gives a gift and then asks for it back" first attested 1892.
| AmerInd American Indian |