Recent Examples on the WebThe records list whether a person’s basis for membership is by blood, intermarriage, adoption or status as formerly enslaved, and have since been used to determine Cherokee ancestry. Harmeet Kaur, CNN, 6 Sep. 2022 The nastiness of such medieval scheming, and the particular perversity of the Targaryen dynasty (which is fond of intermarriage), means that the morality of House of the Dragon is as flat as a pancake. David Sims, The Atlantic, 29 Aug. 2022 As most were male, intermarriage with Mexican women occurred, and many integrated into the community. Minerva Orduño Rincón, The Arizona Republic, 5 Aug. 2022 That correlates closely with other measures of assimilation, such as intermarriage and proficiency in English. Andrew Van Dam, Washington Post, 1 July 2022 Informal Jewish quotas seemed to vanish from college admissions, and intermarriage became more common. Lily Meyer, The Atlantic, 24 May 2022 Because the children of ethnic intermarriage often describe themselves as white regardless of their ancestry, predictions of white decline may turn out to be premature. Samuel Goldman, The Week, 18 May 2022 From the beginning, intermarriage between white and Native peoples was connected to the fur trade.New York Times, 16 Feb. 2022 For most people here, Russians are kin, a view rooted in a common sense of history, local industries that remained intertwined until long after the collapse of the Soviet Union, and high rates of intermarriage. Dominique Soguel, The Christian Science Monitor, 7 Feb. 2022 See More