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Uganda is ethnologically diverse, with at least 40 languages in usage.
The park contains more than 15 sites and nine architectural elements that are of ethnologically interesting.
He was drawn to them because, despite their sinister reputation, they remained ethnologically unknown.
Ethnologically there is no consensus about the name Assenede.
But were the Olmec a "people," ethnologically speaking?
He thus chooses the ethnologically oriented approach.
She had come up with a plan that, ethnologically, should guarantee that they were not pursued when they took the horses.
Ethnologically, the mountain is considered by some to have been the birthplace of the Pushto speaking races.
Kurentovanje is one of the most ethnologically significant Slovenian carnival festivals.
They are ethnologically described as nomadic hunter-gatherers.
Its characters are ethnologically colorful, personifications of the different humanity produced in such non-modern cultural settings.
Lord Howe belongs to the Solomons neither geographically nor ethnologically.
Its definition of what counts toward that 100 is a generous one: "countries and destinations that are politically, ethnologically or geographically different."
Rotuma in Fiji has strong affinities culturally and ethnologically to Polynesia.
Ethnologically, they are akin to the Santals, Mundas, and Hos.
The archipelago is physiographically and ethnologically part of the Polynesian subregion of Oceania.
Ethnologically, the islands of Oceania are divided into the subregions of Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia.
Oceania is the collective name for the more than 25,000 South Pacific islands that divide ethnologically into Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia.
He wrote that "the majority of the inhabitants of Southern Serbia are Orthodox Christian Macedonians, ethnologically more akin to the Bulgarians than to the Serbs."
However, the people of Chakwal or the Dhanni area in particular do not speak Pothohari and are ethnologically not regarded as Potoharis.
During those centuries, the vast region of deserts, mountains, and grazing land was inhabited by people resembling each other in racial, cultural, and linguistic characteristics; ethnologically they were essentially Mongol.
The Urak Lawoi are sometimes classified with the Moken, but they are linguistically and ethnologically distinct, being much more closely related to the Malay people.
The most important was Iconium, in the most fertile spot in the country, of which it was always regarded by the Romans as the capital, although ethnologically it was Phrygian.
The club literature notes that "although some are not actually countries in their own right, they have been included because they are removed from parent, either geographically, politically or ethnologically", based on rules established in 1970.
The Lech, separating Alamannia from the Duchy of Bavaria, did not form, either ethnologically or geographically, a very strong boundary, and there was a good deal of intercommunion between the two people.