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ethnographer

American  
[eth-nahg-ruhf-er] / ɛθˈnɑg rəf ər /

noun

ethnographers plural
  1. a person engaged in ethnography, especially an anthropologist.


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Derived Forms

Inflected Forms

noun

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

There are pictures of the women wearing the cloaks, and a 300-page notebook written by the person who brought the cloaks to Sweden - ethnographer Eric Van Rosen.

From BBC • Jun. 7, 2025

Times editor, city librarian, pal of Teddy Roosevelt’s, lover, poet, Native American ethnographer, cultural preservationist and founder of L.A.’s first real museum, the Southwest Museum.

From Los Angeles Times • Jul. 17, 2024

The only time Frandy has seen Sámi shaman in particular connected to amanita was when a Finnish ethnographer claimed in the 1940s that Inari Sámi noaiddit used to consume amanita with seven spots.

From National Geographic • Dec. 21, 2023

In the late 1850s, naturalist and ethnographer George Gibbs cared for a woolly dog named Mutton.

From Science Daily • Dec. 15, 2023

“The critical moment in the development of the young shepherd’s reputation is his first quarrel,” the ethnographer J. K. Campbell writes of one herding culture in Greece.

From "Outliers" by Malcolm Gladwell

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