ǃKung

Etymology
Borrowed from.

Proper noun

 * 1) A group of Bushmen people living in the Kalahari Desert.
 * 2) * 1992, Richard B. Lee, Work, Sexuality, and Aging Among ǃKung Women, in In her prime: new views of middle-aged women (Virginia Kerns, Judith K. Brown), page 39:
 * Given the early sex play, I will hazard a guess that there are few ǃKung virgins, male or female, at puberty.
 * 1) * c. 2001–2007, Archaeology at the Millennium: A Sourcebook (Gary M. Feinman, T. Douglas Price), page 155:
 * The San-speaking ǃKung of southern Africa are nearly always chosen to exemplify the forager strategy.
 * 1) * 2008, The cultural geography reader (Timothy Oakes, Patricia Lynn Price), page 65:
 * The San-speaking ǃKung of Botswana (the “Bushmen” of old) are presented as a distinct, “other,” and apparently primordial “people.”
 * 1) A Khoisan language spoken in Namibia, Angola, and South Africa, famous for its click consonants.
 * 2) * 1994, The Aging Experience: diversity and commonality across cultures (Jennie Keith), page 24:
 * Harpending spoke ǃKung because of his previous fieldwork in the area,
 * 1) * 2002, New horizons for the San: participatory action research with San communities in Northern Namibia (Dhyani J. Berger, Elke Zimprich), page 22:
 * In Epembe, Oonduda and Uusilo very few people could understand and even fewer could speak ǃKung. They expressed their sorrow at this loss.
 * 1) * 1994, The Aging Experience: diversity and commonality across cultures (Jennie Keith), page 24:
 * Harpending spoke ǃKung because of his previous fieldwork in the area,
 * 1) * 2002, New horizons for the San: participatory action research with San communities in Northern Namibia (Dhyani J. Berger, Elke Zimprich), page 22:
 * In Epembe, Oonduda and Uusilo very few people could understand and even fewer could speak ǃKung. They expressed their sorrow at this loss.
 * 1) * 2002, New horizons for the San: participatory action research with San communities in Northern Namibia (Dhyani J. Berger, Elke Zimprich), page 22:
 * In Epembe, Oonduda and Uusilo very few people could understand and even fewer could speak ǃKung. They expressed their sorrow at this loss.

Translations

 * Korean: ǃ쿵족
 * Russian: Кунг
 * ǃKung:


 * Korean: ǃ쿵어
 * ǃKung: !xun