swanton] EARLY HISTORY OF THE CREEK [NDIANS 363 
by Gatschet, 1 but there are some unfortunate errors and omissions 
which have made it necessary to go back to the original work. 
A careful study of this has made the general outlines of the 
Timueua organization sufficiently plain. 
Pare j a gives the following terms of relationship and their signifi- 
cance along with certain grammatical forms based on them. I have 
arranged them for convenience under the appropriate stem words. 
chirico: chirico viro, chirico nia, used by father and mother in speaking to their 
son and daughter, respectively. 
ahono: ahono viro, ahono nia, used precisely like the above. Among terms used 
by males we find this given farther on again as a mode of expression "more used in 
the interior." The following additional examples occur: Ahono viro misoma, my 
elder son; ahono nia misoma, my elder daughter; ahono viro pacanoqua, my inter- 
mediate son; ahono nia pacanoqua, my intermediate daughter; ahono viro quianima, 
my younger son; ahono viro iubuacoli, ahono viro quianicocoma, my youngest or last 
son; ahono nia iubuacoli, ahono nia quianicocoma, my youngest or last daughter; 
ahono viro ysicora, ahono chirico, ahono ysinahoma, my very last son. 
iti: itina, my father; itaye, thy father; oqe itimima, the father of that one; itinica, 
itinicale, itinicano, ytimile, our father; itayaque, your father; oqecare itimitilama, 
y t iinilemala, their father; ytele, paternal uncle; yteleye, thy paternal uncle; itilemima, 
his uncle; itelemile, ytelenica, ytelenicano, our paternal uncle; yteleyaqe, your 
paternal uncle; ytilemitilama, their paternal uncle; ytemiso, name given to an uncle 
older than the father; ytequiany, name given to an uncle younger than the father; 
ytimale, father and son; ytelemele, uncle and nephew; ytemisomale, elder uncle and 
nephew; ytequianimale, younger uncle and nephew. 
itora (probably from the preceding stem), grandfather, father-in-law, or godfather; 
ytorina, ytorana, my grandfather, etc.; ytoraye, thy grandfather; ytorimima, hisgrand- 
father; ytorimile, ytorinica, ytorinicale, ytorinicano, our grandfather; ytorayaqe, your 
grandfather; ytori mitilama, their grandfather; ytora naribua, coesa ytora, great- 
grandfather; ytora naribuana, my great-grandfather; ytora naribuaye, thy great- 
grandfather; ytora naribuamima, his grandfather; ytora naribuamile, our great-grand- 
father; ytora naribuaiaqe, your great-grandfather; ytora naribuamitilama, their great- 
grandfather; ytora mulu, great-great-grandfather; ytora muluna, my great-great- 
grandfather; ytora muleye, thy great-great-grandfather; ytora mulumima, his great- 
great-grandfather; ytora mulumile, ytora mulunica, ytora mulunicano, our great- 
great-grandfather; ytora muluyaqe, ytora muluyaqeno, your great-great-grandfather; 
ytora mulumitilama, ytora mulumitilale, their great-great-grandfather; ytora is the 
name given by children to their father, his brothers, and their mother's brothers after 
the death of their mother; ytorapatami, ytorapatamima, paternal uncle's wife; ytora, 
term given by a woman to the husband of her aunt; ytora naribua mulumale, the 
great-great-grandfather and great-great-grandson; ytorimale, grandfather and grandson; 
ytorimalema, uncle and nephew or godfather and godchild. 
siqinona, nisiqisama, the one who begot me (name given to the father after his 
death) ; eiqinomale, son and father. 
naribuana, ' 'my old man, " name given to father's brother after his death; naribua- 
pacano, name given to a man deprived of his children by death. 
hue sipire, hue asire, the second stepfather. 
isa, mother: ysona, my mother; ysaya, ysayente, is it thy mother? ysayesa, did thy 
mother do that or this? ysayeate, did thy mother say this or that? ysaye, iste, thy 
1 Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc, xvn, pp. 491-497. 
