A Synopsis of the Indian Tribes Within the United States East of the Rocky Mountains, and in the British and Russian Possessions in North AmericaOriginally published: Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1836. In series: Archaeologia Americana; v. 2. |
Contents
1 | |
7 | |
21 | |
Southern Indians east of the Mississippi and in Louisiana | 60 |
Choctaws and Chicasas | 102 |
Tribes of Lower Louisiana east and west of the Mis | 114 |
Indians west of the Mississippi | 129 |
Grammatical Notices | 135 |
23 | 177 |
Cherokee | 238 |
9 | 247 |
Notes to the Tables of Transitions | 290 |
Cherokee Alphabet | 301 |
Etchemins | 305 |
No 2 | 309 |
Umfrevilles Vocabulary | 373 |
General Observations | 136 |
Means of subsistence hunter state agricultural labor | 152 |
Indian Languages | 160 |
375 | 394 |
Muskhogee Choctaw Caddo | 418 |
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Common terms and phrases
Abenakis according adjectives affixed Algonkin Algonkin-Lenape America amongst animate appear Athapasca belong called Catawbas Charlevoix Cherokee Cherokee language Chicasas Chippeway Choctaw conjugation Creeks dahoal degree of north Delaware derived designated dialect distinct dual English ermikp Eskimaux European expressed father Five Nations French gender Grammar hena himo hundred Hurons inanimate Indian languages indicative inflections inhabitants inserted intransitive verbs Iroquois koo wadchan Lake land Lenape lungiha Mississippi mood mountains Muskhogee neen newo nominative north latitude nouns objective Onondago particles passive voice plural possessive pronoun prefixed Preterite probably respect second person Shawnoes sing Sioux southern speak subjunctive substantive syllable tenses termination territory thee third person thou thousand souls tion tive tokchě transitions treaty tribes tsheeng pee Tuscaroras Tuteloes tying ungya verb vicinity villages vocabulary wadchan Woccons wonni words Wyandots Yamassees