North American Indian people living mainly in Arizona, U.S. The Pima language is of pi-nyi-match , meaning "I don't know.
" They call themselves Akimel O'odham, meaning "River People." Their traditional lands are located in the core area of the prehistoric {{link=Hohokam culture">Hohokam culture , from which they probably descend. The Pima originally were sedentary corn farmers who lived in one-room houses and used the Gila and Salt rivers for irrigation. Some hunting and gathering were also done. Their villages were larger than those of the related Papago Indians, and they possessed a stronger tribal unity. The Pima were long friendly with whites but enemies of the Apache . At the turn of the 21st century they numbered some 15,000.