Citations:Lamanitish

English citations of Lamanitish

1830 1851 1881 1882 1907 1966 1987
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1830, Joseph Smith, Book of Mormon, translation of original by Mormon, Alma 17:26:
    And after he had been in the service of the king three days, as he was with the Lamanitish servants going forth with their flocks to the place of water [...] and all the Lamanites drive their flocks hither, that they might have water—
  • 1851, Henry Mayhew, Charles Mackay, “The Lamanite Skeleton”, in The Mormons, or Latter-day Saints: A Contemporary History[1], Office of the National Illustrated Library, page 75:
    The brethren procured a shovel and a hoe, and removing the earth of one of the mounds [...] discovered the skeleton of a man almost entire, and between his ribs was a Lamanitish arrow.
  • 1881 October 19, John Taylor, “The Building Up of Zion—Gratitude to God, Enduring Trial, etc.”, in Journal of Discourses, volume 22, page 312:
    I am pleased to meet with you, and I should have been so the other evening, when you held your last meeting, but I thought it proper to remain among our Lamanitish brethren, as they look to us for instruction.
  • 1882, John Taylor, The Meditation and Atonement[2], Deseret News Company, page 201:
    But the history of the former has been handed down to us through an impure Lamanitish source, which has sadly disfigured and perverted the original incidents and teachings of the Savior's life and ministry.
  • 1907 January, Earnest Webbe, “The Song of Eena, the Nephite Maiden”, in Autumn Leaves[3], volume 20, number 1, page 299:
    Down in Shemlon where the maidens / Of the Lamanitish people / Held their dances and made merry, / Where light youth too would assemble, / Came a fairer Nephite handmaid / Of the people Limhi ruled.
  • 1966, Bruce R. McConkie, “Quetzalcoatl”, in Mormon Doctrine, 2nd edition, published 1976, →LCCN, page 613:
    Lamanitish tradition has preserved the account of the ministry among the ancient inhabitants of America of a white God called Quetzalcoatl.
  • 1987, J Reuben Clark, David H Yarn, J. Reuben Clark: Selected Papers on Americanism and National Affairs[4], →ISBN, page 99:
    The Lamanitish branch remained, but under a condemnation that has followed them now for more than two thousand four hundred years.