0 a rounded structure made from a frame of poles covered with materials such as grass, cloth, or animal skins, lived in by Native Americans, especially in the northeastern US and Canada in the past:
1 a cone-shaped tent made and lived in, esp. in the past, by American Indians in the eastern US
She had a new, boxy "government" home but in the backyard she kept a dome-shaped wigwam.
In the centre of each wigwam, a fire burned constantly, and above it was a hole in the wigwam to let out the smoke.
They established villages, their wigwams set closely together around a centre which was left open for games or ceremonies.
For height, you can have wigwams of runner beans, sweet peas and clematis.
The buses then spawned an enormous wigwam, and the wigwam spawned the almost inevitable mass of rubbish, rather grubby children, and lots of dogs.
I am not prepared to accept that, because the houses built today are houses and not wigwams.
I did say of house production and not wigwam production.
They had a pow-wow in a wigwam, but they could not smoke the peace pipe because they had broken it.
中文繁体
(尤指過去美國東部印第安人居住的)尖頂棚屋,簡陋小屋…
More中文简体
(尤指过去美国东部印第安人居住的)尖顶棚屋,简陋小屋…
MoreEspañol
tienda india, tepe…
MoreFrançais
wigwam…
MoreDeutsch
der Wigwam…
MoreNorwegian
wigwam…
MoreČeština
vigvam…
MoreDansk
wigwam…
More