• First Nation

    Full definition of First Nation

    Noun

    First Nation

    (plural First Nations)
    1. An Indian settlement or band.
    2. (Canada, usually plural) The indigenous peoples of Canada (not including Inuit or Metis).
      • 2001, Quebec, Francois Remillard, Hunter Publishing, Inc, ISBN 2894645953, pg. 27:Generally speaking, the works of First Nations artists were made with materials such as wood, leather or cloth.
    3. (Canada, less common) The indigenous peoples of any country or region.
      • 2006, Scott Simon, "Formosa's First Nations and the Japanese: from colonial rule to postcolonial resistance," Japan Focus, ISSN 1557-4660, http://www.japanfocus.org/products/details/1565:As “savages” become soldiers, and soldiers become social activists, the tribe has rapidly developed a First Nations identity as advocates of both stripes mobilize memories of past resistance in different contexts. Whether the state is green or blue, therefore, Taroko memories will continue to shape the relationship between state and tribe.

    Adjective

    First Nation

    1. (usually in plural) Of or pertaining to a First Nation or the First Nations.

    Usage notes

    In Canada, First Nations is the usual term in official use, news media, and polite conversation. Indian has come to have a stigma attached to it because of its origin in Columbus thinking he had arrived in India, but it remains in common use officially (e.g., Canadian government Department of Indian and Northern Affairs) as well as colloquially by First Nations people themselves, and other Canadians. According to the Canadian Oxford Dictionary, "it is also the only clear way to distinguish among the three general groups of Canadian Aboriginal people (Indians, Inuit, and Metis)."

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