Dhegihanists: Ethnonyms for SE tribes?
Carolyn Quintero
cqcqcq at pgtv.net
Thu Aug 15 15:53:14 UTC 2002
Bob,
All my speakers were "rusty" when it came to tribe names. The ones I find
are the following:
Cherokee $Alaki [Bristow, ok'd by Morrel]
Cherokee (Variant) $saAke [Bristow, unconfirmed]
Creek (Muskogee): muskOke [Bristow, tentatively ok'd by L Shannon and Ed Red
Eagle] LF: moN-shko'-ge
Choctaw -unknown; Not in LF
Chickasaw - ??; LF = T-dot si'-ge-shi
Shawnee - $Awani [Bristow, confirmed by Margaret Red Eagle]; LF ZhoN-ni'
Caddo - hiNiN$A [produced, Holding and Morrell]
NOT S.E. OR NOT REQUESTED are the following:
Pawnee -hpadhImaha (Holding), hpAimaNhaN (Bristow), hpAiNmaha (Morrell - who
applies this term to any western tribe) LF: P-dot a'-thiN and P-dot
a'-thiN-moN-hoN
Navajo - haxINlezêkaaghe [LF same....]
Sac and Fox - sakIwa, sakIz^iN, sakIwo
Carolyn
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu
[mailto:owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu]On Behalf Of R. Rankin
Sent: Thursday, August 15, 2002 10:37 AM
To: siouan at lists.colorado.edu
Subject: Dhegihanists: Ethnonyms for SE tribes?
Awhile back I was asked to provide Dhegiha names for
the various tribes of the aboriginal Southeast. I
found several in my Kansa and Quapaw notes, but I
wonder if any of you have more from Osage, Omaha or
Ponca? These would include names for the Cherokee,
Creek (Muskogee), Choctaw, Chickasaw, Shawnee and
presumably Caddo, plus a variety of others if they can
be discovered.
UPPER CASE vowels are accented. What I found so far:
Quapaw /$adAkke/ is 'Cherokee'.
Quapaw /$awaNnaN/ is 'Shawnee'.
Kansa /$ayAkki/ is 'Cherokee' in Dorsey's notes, but by
the 1970's Mrs. Rowe gave a more modern /ccelEkki/.
Note that Quapaw /d/ and Kansa /y/ normally correspond
in cognate vocabulary.
Kansa /moN$kOge/ is 'Creek, Muskogee'. It's
interesting since the Kansa speakers borrowed the name
(from Creeks or perhaps others) with /$/ rather than
/s/. This probably reflects the fact that, in Creek,
the sibilant is most often retroflexed next to back
vowels, and this was apparently perceived as the
alveopalatal rather than the dental or alveolar.
Kansa /ccIkkasa/ and /ccattA/ are 'Chickasaw' and
'Choctaw' respectively -- both from Dorsey.
Kansa /hi$A/ is 'Caddo'. I don't have any etymology
for this. It's from Dorsey.
Kansa /$Awane/ is 'Shawnee' for Dorsey, but again Mrs.
Rowe gave the modern /$oNnI/.
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