Talk:Rarámuri
Does the article only talk about male Tarahumara?: new section
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The article says that the Tarahumara "still" practice transhumance. This is not clear to me. None of the animals listed in this article are native to the New World. How long have the indigenous people there practiced a lifestyle they could not have begun until the Spanish imported livestock, and is it the best description to say they "still" do that? |
The article says that the Tarahumara "still" practice transhumance. This is not clear to me. None of the animals listed in this article are native to the New World. How long have the indigenous people there practiced a lifestyle they could not have begun until the Spanish imported livestock, and is it the best description to say they "still" do that? |
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[[User:IAmNitpicking|IAmNitpicking]] ([[User talk:IAmNitpicking|talk]]) 03:58, 1 July 2018 (UTC) |
[[User:IAmNitpicking|IAmNitpicking]] ([[User talk:IAmNitpicking|talk]]) 03:58, 1 July 2018 (UTC) |
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== Does the article only talk about male Tarahumara? == |
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The title of the article changed from Tarahumara to Rarámuri, and inside the article all instances of Tarahumara also were changed to Rarámuri, but the very same article says: |
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> the endonymic term rarámuri refers specifically to the men; women are referred to as mukí (individually), and as omugí or igómale (collectively). |
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The, does the article only talk about the male Tarahumara? Every time the text says Rarámuri is it talking only about men, excluding women? |
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When the title was Tarahumara and the text said Tarahumara it was evident it was always referring about both men and women. Now, not so much. |
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--[[Special:Contributions/~2026-24237-46|~2026-24237-46]] ([[User talk:~2026-24237-46|talk]]) 00:18, 21 April 2026 (UTC) |
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