A berry, probably found on a bush.
its native to Washington
Sunderland supporters
buttmuch
"Kinnikinnick" - a Potawatomi Indian word, meaning: that which is mixed.
No. Most contain wheat. There are gluten-free versions though, such as kinnikinnick in Canada.
That was actually an American Indian name for a mixture of several plants that were smoked (instead of tobacco) in ceremonies. See link below for more information.
Here is a list of some really good gluten free cookies brands:Enjoy LifeGefenGlutanoGluten free pantry (mix for baking)Kinnikinnick FoodsMi-DelPamela'S ProductsPanderos Delight'S
Jonathan Williams has written: 'Get hot or get out' 'Kinnikinnick brand kickapoo joy-juice' -- subject(s): Artists' books 'Descant on Rawthey's madrigal; conversations with Basil Bunting' 'Metafours for mysophobes / Jonathan Williams' 'Shankum naggum' 'Portrait photographs' -- subject(s): Portrait photography, Portraits, Photography, Poets 'Aposiopeses' 'Thermometrical navigation..' 'Fifty epiphytes' 'Hot what?' 'The Delian seasons' 'Noah Webster to wee Lorine Niedecker' -- subject(s): Poetry 'The loco logodaedalist in situ'
Yes, there are commercially sold gluten-free breads found in large supermarkets as well as in specialty health-food stores. There are also many recipes available for baking gluten-free breads at home.
Smoking was widespread among natives in North, Central and South America, often by women as well as men. The pipes known to white people as "peace pipes" were actually sacred forms of pipe smoked for any kind of important gathering, including making treaties or plans for war - so the term "peace pipe" is not really appropriate. Such pipes would be passed around a council of elders (often four times around the circle) and generally had very long stems.Tobacco, very similar to modern kinds, was grown and smoked in the south-eastern parts of the current USA and into Mexico and Central America; further north in the woodlands and to the west on the Great Plains tobacco was not available so alternatives were found.Red willow bark, dried and crushed, makes a tolerable tobacco substitute and smells very much like pipe tobacco; the Natick (Massachusetts) word kinukkinuk meaning "mixed" was commonly used to describe any mixture of dried bark, bearberry leaves and other plant material smoked in pipes. When tobacco was available from white traders, tribes simply added it to the kinnikinnick mixture.Some people claim that the dried "tassels" from cornhusks were used for smoking, but this may be a later habit among white settlers.On the Plains, no tobacco was grown for smoking (the Crows grew sacred tobacco plants from carefully-kept seed for ceremonies, but did not use it for smoking); they obtained tobacco "plugs" from traders or used a mixture of dried herbs, bark and leaves that continued to be known as kinnikinnik, even though that was not a Plains word. Red willow bark (cansasa) was a particular favourite of the Sioux tribes, who considered it sacred.The links below take you to images of modern kinnikinnick and the bearberry plant that was often included:
None of the Plains tribes grew any kind of crops, since they lived nomadic lifestyles and were never in the same place long enough. Tobacco for smoking was either obtained through trade, either direct from white traders or through other tribes who got it from the whites, or they used native "tobacco" consisting mainly of red willow bark mixed with other local dried plants.In fact, some Virginia tobacco was reaching the Plains tribes before the first white people arrived on the Plains, via other native tribes.The native "tobacco" was (and still is) usually known as "kinnikinnick", a Delaware term meaning "mixed"; its exact composition depended on locally available plants and tree bark, but in general the bearberry plant, red osier dogwood, cornel wood, bunchberry plant, sumac, arrowroot, laurel, cherry bark, black birch and willow bark would be dried and used for a smoking mixture.The only exception among the Plains tribes were the Crows, who grew a specific type of nicotiana (tobacco) plant during elaborate annual religious ceremonies - but this was never used for smoking. Its flowers resembled stars and the plant was credited with celestial and spiritual powers, so it was considered far too sacred to smoke in pipes.
3-letter words ick 4-letter words dick, hick, kick, lick, nick, pick, rick, sick, tick, wick 5-letter words brick, chick, click, crick, flick, hoick, prick, quick, slick, snick, stick, thick, trick, wrick 6-letter words antick, detick, medick, shtick, strick, unpick, uptick 7-letter words airsick, bedtick, carsick, cowlick, derrick, dornick, fossick, gimmick, hayrick, killick, maffick, miskick, niblick, nitpick, nudnick, nutpick, outkick, rollick, schtick, seasick, topkick, unstick, zaddick 8-letter words baldrick, benedick, bootlick, boychick, dabchick, dipstick, dominick, downtick, dropkick, handpick, homesick, joystick, limerick, lipstick, lobstick, lopstick, lovesick, maverick, nonstick, outtrick, oversick, pigstick, pinprick, politick, redbrick, sidekick 9-letter words antistick, bailiwick, brainsick, chopstick, crabstick, drumstick, firebrick, flagstick, goldbrick, greensick, heartsick, mahlstick, maulstick, overtrick, placekick, shashlick, slapstick, toothpick, yardstick 10-letter words broomstick, candlewick, fingerpick, matchstick, meterstick, nightstick, superslick, superthick, taperstick, ultraslick, undertrick 11-letter words candlestick, fiddlestick, outpolitick, singlestick 12-letter words kinnikinnick, walkingstick 117 words found.