The American actress Pamela Suzette Grier (born 1949) is of African-American ancestry. "Looks native American" is not a very scientific way of classifying ethnicity.
There are many hundreds of people in the world with the name "Pam Grier", some of whom may have native American ancestry - but the actress does not.
The American Eagle logo has the eagle looking to his right/your left. This is not only true for the official US American Eagle logo, but also the logo for American Eagle Outfitters.
The color of the Union flag was red, white, and blue. It looks similar to the modern American flag.
The coin is so very common circulated coins are 2 to 5 cents, one that looks like new is 10 cents.
Everywhere! Ever see someone that is Mexican, or Puerto Rican, or even some one that just has dark hair and brown skin, well they re probably of native blood .The recessive gene that native peoples of the Americas have is the most dominant and unchanging gene on the planet so the dark hair and brown skin complexion is always apparent when it come to how a person looks. Come on look at a Mayan, a Pima, a Navajo, a Colombian, a Salvadorian, and a Mexican. The gene is totally apparent in all of them unless thy re a "gringo" of European descent living within the Americas . Native peoples live everywhere in North America, Central America, and South America .The pyramids in Mexico was the Central trading spot of "The Peoples" Natives Empire and society in ancient times. Oh and the person who updated this answer "ME" am myself an Amerindian "American Indian" of the Akimel O'otham tribe and Nican Tlaca people. So to answer this question I'm right here !
Chances are, if it is the same size or looks like a dime, it may be counterfeit.
English, Scottish, and Native American. The touch of Native American gives her the exotic looks.
She's American. She may be of French ancestry, though - her last name looks like it.
She was Black but possibly racially mixed. the slang term, not to be confused with engineering use of ( Just under the danger zone) is HIGH YELLOW. The high yellow arc on speedometer or pressure gauge is just that- just under the danger zone. High yellow operation is permissible, but not the Red Line. so it goes. My answer is that Aaliyah is Half black because of her dad, and Native because of her mom i think. her mom looks native
well its called ejovic
Puerto Rican, Afro-Cuban, Irish, and Native American heritage
It looks like you are trying to spell Squaxin.Squaxin is a Native-American island tribe which reside in the west of Washington.
yes many of their ancestors were from Africa which makes them "African American" but their nationality would be American, if they were born here. NO! Black Americans are of mixed heritage, being part Native American, part European, & in some cases part Asian. They are American like Italians are Italian even if the Italian person has some African blood. Black Americans are tied to America by their Native American ancestry. That's why there is such a variation in the looks of many. When one studies history, one finds this out. The term African American is a misnomer & negates the other members of a black Americans family tree. Why not be honest about what you are & use terminology that shows this?
The Oneida is a Native American tribe and they wear traditional Oneidaian clothing that looks similar to many other traditional Native American clothing.
"native american" isn't a language, it's a race.
He looks either black and mexican or black and native american to me.
Kamal Givens (and his brother Ahmad) is African American. Both parents are Black, however they do have Native American in their lineage. we do not give out people number
According to Red Wolf, a native American, "MORE THAN 20 MILLION PEOPLE IN THE UNITED STATES ARE OF NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN MIXED BLOOD. IF YOU HAVE ONE DROP OF INDIAN BLOOD, YOU ARE INDIAN. WALK THE INDIAN PATH AS YOUR HEART FEELS". Don't forget all the Indians in Asian India. Whether you are a member of a particular ethnic group if you have one parent from that group, one grandparent, one great-grandparent, or "one drop of blood" (an obsolete and racist way of saying "any ancestry no matter how small") is a matter of how you and the culture you live in looks at things. There is no universal agreement on this point. In the days of American segregation, having a great-great-grandparent who was black would make you black - as long as your skin was also dark. The Nazis held that anyone was Jewish if they had one grandparent who was Jewish. Advocates for Native Americans, who want to preserve Native identity in the face of widespread intermarriage with descendants of Europeans over the centuries, will say that anyone with any native ancestry is a native American - thus leaving it to the individual to discover and assert that connection. On the other hand, US government criteria for recognizing a Native American for purposes of receiving government benefits is more restrictive.