Auca - aw kah ( long a ) and a (uh) sound !
Auca coctei was created in 1838.
ampheeceelas
Nuh-than -yul
The Huaorani or Waos people live in the Amazonian Region of Ecuador. The name Auca to refer to this tribe is no longer used.
you prounouce as (cee-tes-e-bus
脸书 prounouce: lian shu
Advance under collection account
The Auca Indians, also known as the Waorani, were reached with the gospel primarily through the efforts of five missionaries, including Jim Elliot and Nate Saint, in the late 1950s. After years of preparation and attempts to make contact, the missionaries established a friendship with the Auca by dropping gifts from an airplane. Tragically, in January 1956, the missionaries were killed by the very tribe they sought to reach. However, their sacrifices led to later successful missions, resulting in many Aucas eventually accepting the Christian faith.
"Hidcote" is pronounced as "HID-kote." The emphasis is on the first syllable, "HID," while the second syllable, "kote," rhymes with "coat."
That is the correct spelling of Egypt, the African country.The usual US pronunciation is (EE-jipt) which sounds like E gypped.
Jim Elliot was a missionary in Ecuador to the Auca Indians. He died when he was trying to communicate with the Indians on January 8, 1956. He died with Nate Saint, Pete Fleming, and Roger Youderian. They didn't injure a single Auca. Later, Nate Saints wife and children went to live with the Aucas and befriended the very Aucas that had killed her husband.
Actually you pronounce it like if your saying aw- kah long a and an uh sound isn't it an Indian tribe... so anyway it should be spelled Acuh