How to use in-sentence of “osage”:
+ It is in the Osage Cuestas and Cherokee Lowlands.
+ The Osage had to leave because veterans of the American Civil War were looking for land.
+ It was named after its Chief Chetopah, whose name in the Osage language signifies “four lodges”.
+ At the start of the 19th century, the area was mostly controlled by the Osage people.
+ The contemporary indigenous peoples were called the Osage Indians.
+ The Osage are a federally recognized tribe.
+ The Osage originally lived among the Kaw peopleKansa, Omaha, and Quapaw in the Ohio Valley.
Example sentences of “osage”:
+ The Osage would often practice ritual scalping and beheading as military trophies.
+ These included the Plains Indiansplains Indian tribes of the Kansas, the Osage and the Pawnee people.
+ One of the largest Osage bands was led by Chief Black Dog.
+ It was thought at the time that the Osage northern border was also the 37th parallel.
+ In 1825 the Osage Nation was given a reservation in eastern Indian territory in what is now Kansas.
+ Weinstein won an Academy AwardsAcademy Award for producing “The Producers”, “Billy Elliot the Musical”, and “August: Osage County”.
+ When Congress set the southern border of the Kansas Territory as the 37th parallel, they thought that the Osage southern border was also the 37th parallel.
+ Lyndon is a city in Osage County, KansasOsage County, Kansas, United States.
+ The city is on the northern edge of the Osage Plains.
+ The Osage people refer to themselves in their own language as Wazhazhe.
+ The Osage would often practice ritual scalping and beheading as military trophies.
+ These included the Plains Indiansplains Indian tribes of the Kansas, the Osage and the Pawnee people.
+ One of the largest Osage bands was led by Chief Black Dog.
+ He is known for his roles in the movies “Young Guns Young Guns”, “The Last Outlaw”, “August: Osage County”.
+ This was a row house in the middle of the 6200 block of Osage Avenue.
+ The community started as an Osage village.
+ In 1847 a trading post to exchange goods with the Osage Nation was built here by Larkin McGhee.
+ He learned English at Fort Osage High School and later studied to be an American citizen.
+ There were also many Osage there.
+ To the south are the Osage Plains.