Algonquian is not a tribe, but the people of many tribes. They live anywhere they want to live, whether it be on their tribe's reserve, in a rural area, suburban area, or urban area. Life varies depending on the person and their surroundings. Some reserves have problems with healthcare, drugs, and so on, while some do not; some people are poor, some are not. There is no one answer to your question.
very easy to stay a live in a tiguas tribe
The Algonquin tribe, also called Algonkin, Anishinaabe or Omàmiwininiwak, live today where they have always lived - along the Ottawa river valley between Quebec and Ontario in Canada.Many other tribes in the USA and Canada speak languages which are classed as Algonquian (meaning "like Algonquin").
Many people are confused about the meanings of the words "Algonquin" and "Algonquian".The Algonquin tribe, also called Algonkin, Anishinaabe or Omàmiwininiwak, live today where they have always lived - along the Ottawa river valley between Quebec and Ontario in Canada.Many other tribes in the USA and Canada speak languages which are classed as Algonquian (meaning "like Algonquin"). They lived across most of North America; the Blackfoot, Arapaho and Cheyenne of the Great Plains all spoke Algonquian languages, so did the Powhatan, Secotan and Pamunkey of Virginia, the Delawares, the Shawnees, the Ojibwe/Chippewa, the Cree, The Montagnais, Abenaki, Penobscot and Mi'kmaq, the Menomini, Sauk and Fox and very many other tribes.So it is not possible to say that the Algonquian people lived in any one place - they were many tribes living across many thousands of square miles of territory.
They Might Have
The Algonquin tribe, also called Algonkin, Anishinaabe or Omàmiwininiwak, live today where they have always lived - along the Ottawa river valley between Quebec and Ontario in Canada.Many other tribes in the USA and Canada speak languages which are classed as Algonquian (meaning "like Algonquin").
algonquian
yes or no
The Eastern Woodlands
bule ridge mountians
The Cheyenne live in Montana. On the Great Plains.
Many people are confused about the meanings of the words "Algonquin" and "Algonquian".The Algonquin tribe, also called Algonkin, Anishinaabe or Omà miwininiwak, live today where they have always lived - along the Ottawa river valley between Quebec and Ontario in Canada.Many other tribes in the USA and Canada speak languages which are classed as Algonquian (meaning "like Algonquin"). They lived across most of North America; the Blackfoot, Arapaho and Cheyenne of the Great Plains all spoke Algonquian languages, so did the Powhatan, Secotan and Pamunkey of Virginia, the Delawares, the Shawnees, the Ojibwe/Chippewa, the Cree, The Montagnais, Abenaki, Penobscot and Mi'kmaq, the Menomini, Sauk and Fox and very many other tribes.So it is not possible to say that the Algonquian people lived in any one place - they were many tribes living across many thousands of square miles of territory.
Algonquins lived in wigwams or wetus. Wigwam is the word for "house" in the Abenaki tribe, and wetu is the word for "house" in the Wampanoag tribe.They would have a fire going and many fur pelts hung up inside.