definición y significado de Tribe | sensagent.com


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alemán árabe búlgaro checo chino coreano croata danés eslovaco esloveno español estonio farsi finlandés francés griego hebreo hindù húngaro indonesio inglés islandés italiano japonés letón lituano malgache neerlandés noruego polaco portugués rumano ruso serbio sueco tailandès turco vietnamita

Definición y significado de Tribe

Definición

tribe (n.)

1.group of people related by blood or marriage

2.(biology) a taxonomic category between a genus and a subfamily

3.a federation (as of American Indians)

4.a social division of (usually preliterate) people

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Merriam Webster

TribeTribe (?), n. [L. tribus, originally, a third part of the Roman people, afterwards, a division of the people, a tribe; of uncertain origin: cf. F. tribu.]


1. A family, race, or series of generations, descending from the same progenitor, and kept distinct, as in the case of the twelve tribes of Israel, descended from the twelve sons of Jacob. “The Lion of the tribe of Juda.” Rev. v. 5.

A wealthy Hebrew of my tribe. Shak.

2. (Bot.) A number of species or genera having certain structural characteristics in common; as, a tribe of plants; a tribe of animals.

☞ By many recent naturalists, tribe has been used for a group of animals or plants intermediate between order and genus.

3. A nation of savages or uncivilized people; a body of rude people united under one leader or government; as, the tribes of the Six Nations; the Seneca tribe.

4. A division, class, or distinct portion of a people, from whatever cause that distinction may have originated; as, the city of Athens was divided into ten tribes.

5. (Stock Breeding) A family of animals descended from some particular female progenitor, through the female line; as, the Duchess tribe of shorthorns.

TribeTribe, v. t. To distribute into tribes or classes. [R.]

Our fowl, fish, and quadruped are well tribed. Abp. Nicolson.

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Definición (más)

definición de Tribe (Wikipedia)

Sinónimos

Ver también

Frases

A Tribe Called Quest • Abor (tribe) • Abor tribe • Absentee-Shawnee Tribe of Indians • Ais (tribe) • Al-Ali (tribe) • Al-Ubaid (tribe) • Algonquin Tribe • Angaria (tribe) • Anu (tribe) • Applegate tribe • Arxel Tribe • Australian Aboriginal tribe • Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Tribe • Baiga (tribe) • Bangulzai (tribe) • Bhel (tribe) • Biloxi tribe • Blood Tribe • Blood tribe • Blue Sky Tribe • Brahmani (tribe) • Buri (Germanic tribe) • Chehalis (tribe) • Cheraw (tribe) • Chesapeake (tribe) • Chickahominy (tribe) • Chicora tribe • Collaborations (Space Tribe album) • Coos (tribe) • Cowlitz (tribe) • Crow tribe • Dano (tribe) • Dar (tribe) • Davi (tribe) • David Tribe • Deadsoul Tribe • Declaration of the Lillooet Tribe • Deer Tribe Metis • Duwamish (tribe) • Efe (tribe) • Erie (tribe) • Ewe tribe • Flight Tribe • George Tribe • Gio Tribe • Gola (tribe) • Habbaniya (tribe) • Heart Beat (Space Tribe album) • History of the Duwamish tribe • Houma Tribe • In My Tribe • Indian tribe • Iowa Tribe of Oklahoma • Iowa tribe • Jatoi (tribe) • Joyo (tribe) • Kalapuya (tribe) • Kasi tribe • Kato (tribe) • Kaw (tribe) • Kayı tribe • Khalil (tribe) • Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma • Klickitat (tribe) • Kota tribe • Krippendorf's Tribe • Kundi (tribe) • Langah (tribe) • Lango (tribe) • Lari (tribe) • Last Tribe • Lehri (tribe) • List of The Tribe characters • Lost Tribe • Lost tribe of Israel • Love Tribe • Malik (tribe) • Manes (tribe) • Mashantucket Pequot Tribe • Mazari tribe • Meds (tribe) • Mekan tribe • Miami (tribe) • Miami tribe • Mir (tribe) • Monacan (tribe) • Mono tribe • Music for a Slaughtering Tribe • Nanticoke Indian Tribe • Narragansett (tribe) • Neutral Tribe • Nisqually (tribe) • Nochea Tribe • Nochiya Tribe • Nooksack (tribe) • Noon (tribe) • Oh My God (A Tribe Called Quest song) • Otoe-Missouria Tribe of Indians • Ottawa Tribe of Oklahoma • Padam (tribe) • Padam tribe • Pascua Yaqui Tribe • Pee Dee (tribe) • Piscataway (tribe) • Pomeranians (Slavic tribe) • Puyallup (tribe) • Quileute (tribe) • Quilmes (tribe) • Quinault (tribe) • Quraish Tribe • Rainbow Tribe • Ramapo Tribe • Ramapough Tribe • Rappahannock Tribe • Rind (tribe) • Rio Pardo (tribe) • Rogue River (tribe) • Roman tribe • Samma (tribe) • Sammamish (tribe) • San (tribe) • Sandia Tribe • Santee tribe • Schaghticoke (tribe) • Shapeshifter (Space Tribe album) • Shasta (tribe) • Shawnee (tribe) • Shawnee Tribe • Sherwani (tribe) • Shoalwater Bay Tribe • Sial (tribe) • Sioux Tribe of Minnesota • Sitka Tribe of Alaska • Siuslaw (tribe) • Skokomish (tribe) • Sound Tribe Sector Nine • Squaxin Island Tribe • Stillaguamish (tribe) • Suburban Tribe • Swati (tribe) • Swedes (Germanic tribe) • Swinomish (tribe) • The Anthology (A Tribe Called Quest album) • The Astonishing Tribe • The Thirteenth Tribe • The Tribe (dance band) • Toda (tribe) • Toda Tribe • Toto tribe • Tribe (Bernie Taupin album) • Tribe (Queensrÿche album) • Tribe (TV series) • Tribe (biology) • Tribe (comics) • Tribe (disambiguation) • Tribe 8 • Tribe Called Quest • Tribe Flood Network • Tribe Magazine • Tribe Moki • Tribe Records • Tribe Vibes • Tribe of Asher • Tribe of Benjamin • Tribe of Dan • Tribe of Ephraim • Tribe of Gad • Tribe of Heaven • Tribe of Issachar • Tribe of Joseph • Tribe of Judah • Tribe of Judah (band) • Tribe of Levi • Tribe of Manassah • Tribe of Manasseh • Tribe of Mic-O-Say • Tribe of Naphtali • Tribe of Pirkka • Tribe of Reuben • Tribe of Rome • Tribe of Simeon • Tribe of Tahquitz • Tribe of Zebulun • Turi (tribe) • Tuscarora (tribe) • Umpqua (tribe) • Ute Mountain Ute Tribe • Ute tribe • Varni tribe • Vibe Tribe • Walla Walla (tribe) • Yaquina (tribe) • Yazoo tribe • Yurok (tribe) • Zand tribe • Zardari (tribe) • Zoa tribe • Zoe (tribe)

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Wikipedia

Tribe

                   

A tribe is viewed, historically or developmentally, as a social group existing before the development of, or outside of, states. Many anthropologists used the term tribal society to refer to societies organized largely on the basis of kinship, especially corporate descent groups (see clan and kinship).

Some theorists hold that tribes represent a stage in social evolution intermediate between bands and states. Other theorists argue that tribes developed after, and must be understood in terms of their relationship to, states.

It is important to note that the word 'tribe' is a contested term due to its roots in colonial anthropological foundations and the connotations that these hierarchical definitions have.[1] [2][3][4]It is common practice to use alternative terms like 'ethnic group' , or nation.[5][6][7][8]

Contents

  Etymology

The English word tribe occurs in 12th-century Middle English literature as referring to one of the Twelve Tribes of Israel. The word is from Old French tribu, in turn from Latin tribus, referring to the original tripartite ethnic division of the Roman state: Ramnes (Ramnenses), Tities (Titienses), and Luceres, corresponding, according to Varro, to the Latins, Sabines, and Etruscans respectively. The Ramnes were named after Romulus, leader of the Latins, Tities after Tatius, leader of the Sabines, and Luceres after Lucumo, leader of an Etruscan army that had assisted the Latins. According to Livy, the three tribes were in fact squadrons of knights, rather than ethnic divisions. The term's ultimate etymology is uncertain, perhaps from the Proto-Indo-European roots *tri- ("three") and *bhew- ("to be").[9]

In 242–240 BC, the Tribal Assembly (comitia tributa) in the Roman Republic was organized in 35 Tribes (four "Urban Tribes" and 31 "Rural Tribes"). The Latin word as used in the Bible translates as Greek phyle "race, tribe, clan" and ultimately the Hebrew שבט ([ʃevæt]) or "sceptre". In the historical sense, "tribe," "race" and "clan" can be used interchangeably.

The term's origin might be found with the Latin word for three, tres. The dative and ablative case forms of this word are both tribus. The word tribus could therefore mean "from the three" or "for the three."[citation needed][dubious ]

  Evolution

Considerable debate takes place over how best to characterize tribes. This partly stems from perceived differences between pre-state tribes and contemporary tribes; some reflects more general controversy over cultural evolution and colonialism. In the popular imagination, tribes reflect a way of life that predates, and is more "natural", than that in modern states. Tribes also privilege primordial social ties, are clearly bounded, homogeneous, parochial, and stable. Thus, many believed[who?] that tribes organize links between families (including clans and lineages), and provide them with a social and ideological basis for solidarity that is in some way more limited than that of an "ethnic group" or of a "nation". Anthropological and ethnohistorical research has challenged all of these notions.

Anthropologist Elman Service presented a system of classification for societies in all human cultures based on the evolution of social inequality and the role of the state. This system of classification contains four categories:

  1. Gatherer-hunter bands, which are generally egalitarian.
  2. Tribal societies in which there are some limited instances of social rank and prestige (see Chiefdom).
  3. Stratified tribal societies led by chieftains.
  4. Civilizations, with complex social hierarchies and organized, institutional governments.

In his 1975 study, The Notion of the Tribe, anthropologist Morton H. Fried provided numerous examples of tribes the members of which spoke different languages and practised different rituals, or that shared languages and rituals with members of other tribes. Similarly, he provided examples of tribes where people followed different political leaders, or followed the same leaders as members of other tribes. He concluded that tribes in general are characterized by fluid boundaries and heterogeneity, are not parochial, and are dynamic.[10]

Fried, however, proposed that most contemporary tribes do not have their origin in pre-state tribes, but rather in pre-state bands. Such "secondary" tribes, he suggested, actually came about as modern products of state expansion. Bands comprise small, mobile, and fluid social formations with weak leadership, that do not generate surpluses, pay no taxes and support no standing army. Fried argued that secondary tribes develop in one of two ways. First, states could set them up as means to extend administrative and economic influence in their hinterland, where direct political control costs too much. States would encourage (or require) people on their frontiers to form more clearly bounded and centralized polities, because such polities could begin producing surpluses and taxes, and would have a leadership responsive to the needs of neighboring states (the so-called "scheduled" tribes of the United States or of British India provide good examples of this). Second, bands could form "secondary" tribes as a means to defend themselves against state expansion. Members of bands would form more clearly bounded and centralized polities, because such polities could begin producing surpluses that could support a standing army that could fight against states, and they would have a leadership that could co-ordinate economic production and military activities.

In some countries, such as the United States of America and India, tribes are polities that have been granted legal recognition and limited autonomy by the state.

Archeologists continue to explore the development of pre-state tribes. Current research suggests that tribal structures constituted one type of adaptation to situations providing plentiful yet unpredictable resources. Such structures proved flexible enough to coordinate production and distribution of food in times of scarcity, without limiting or constraining people during times of surplus.

  See also

  Notes

  1. ^ http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/45595
  2. ^ http://www.africasia.com/services/opinions/opinions.php?ID=1701&title=ray
  3. ^ http://www.africaaction.org/talking-about-tribe.html
  4. ^ http://www.madre.org/index/press-room-4/news/whats-wrong-with-the-word-tribe-70.html
  5. ^ http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/45595
  6. ^ http://www.africasia.com/services/opinions/opinions.php?ID=1701&title=ray
  7. ^ http://www.africaaction.org/talking-about-tribe.html
  8. ^ http://www.madre.org/index/press-room-4/news/whats-wrong-with-the-word-tribe-70.html
  9. ^ cf. Gregory Nagy, Greek Mythology and Poetics, Chapter 12, p.276 and on. On p.278, he says, citing the linguist Émile Benveniste in his Origines de la formation des noms en indo-européen, that the Umbrian "trifu" (tribus) is apparently derived from a combination of *tri- and *bhu- where the second element is cognate with the 'phu-' of Greek 'phule', and that this was subdividing the Greek polis into three phulai.
  10. ^ Morton H. Fried 1972 The Notion of Tribe. Cummings Publishing Company

  References

  • Benveniste, Émile
    • Indo-European Language and Society, translated by Elizabeth Palmer. London: Faber and Faber 1973. ISBN 0-87024-250-4.
    • Origines de la formation des noms en indo-européen, 1935.
  • Fried, Morton H. The Notion of Tribe. Cummings Publishing Company, 1975. ISBN 0-8465-1548-2
  • Helm, June, ed, 1968. Essays on the Problem of Tribe, Proceedings, American Ethnological Society, 1967 (Seattle: University of Washington Press).
  • Nagy, Gregory, Greek Mythology and Poetics, Cornell University Press, 1990. In chapter 12, beginning on p. 276, Professor Nagy explores the meaning of the word origin and social context of a tribe in ancient Greece and beyond.
  • Sutton,Imre, Indian Land Tenure: Bibliographical Essays and a Guide to the Literature (NY: Clearwater, 1975): tribe—pp. 101–02,180-82, 186-87, 191-93.

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