30 Some Account of the 



nun-neen-Dee-a-oo : the Chippewas, A-lim, Anu- 

 moscb: the Messisaugers, An-nee-moosh : the Otta- 

 was, An-nee-moo-kan-che : the Indians of Penobscot 

 and St. John's, Allomoose : the Natics, Anutn: the 

 Narragansets, Alum : the Miamis, Aul-la-mo : the 

 Wiahtanah, Lemah ? the Pottawatameh, An-nee- 

 moosh : the Shavvnees, Wissi, Wee-seh : the Kaskas- 

 kias, Remoah: the Nanticokes, Alum, and Ihmvdllum: 

 the Mohawks, Abgarijoo ? Er-har ? the Cochnewa- 

 goes, Er-har: the Oneidas, Er-har, Ale-haul, Ale- 

 hall: the Onondagos, Tschierha : the Cayugas, So- 

 lvates : the Senecas, Chee-aah, and Che-eh : the Tus- 

 caroras, Cheeth, Cheethth: the Wyandots, Nee-a-nooh: 

 the Sioux, Shiin-gau, Chonga, Shun-gush: the Osages, 

 Shong-eh : the Cheerake, Keera, Keethlah, Keeth- 

 legth: the Creeks, Ee-fa, E-fah, Ef-fa: the Chik- 

 kasah, O-phe, Oo-phe: the Choktah, 0-phe: the 

 Katahba, Taunt-see, Taunsee, Tase: the Woccons, 

 Tauh-he: the Natchez, Worse : the Mexicans, Chichi: 

 the Poconchi, 7m." and the Chilese, Teiva. 



In my New Views, I have pointed out some very 

 striking affinities between the American names for 

 dog, and the names for this animal in the languages 

 of certain tribes and nations of Asia and Europe. If 

 the affinity between the Wunaumeeh words, Mo-e- 

 kan-neh, Me-kan-ne, and the Latin Canis, the Italian 

 Cane, the Neapolitan Cane, be not accidental (and 

 who, attentively considering the very many affinities 

 that subsist between the languages of the old and 



