578 ETHNOGEOGRAPHY OF THE TEWA INDIANS [etii. ann. 29 



(7) Eng. Tiwa, Tigua. (<Span. (8), below). Cf. Picuris (2), 

 Islcta (3), Jemez (4), Cochiti (5). Sia (6), Span. (8). 



(8) Span. Tigua, etc. Probably < Tiwa or Kcresan. Cf. Pi- 

 curi.s ('i), Isleta (3), Jemez (4), Cochiti (5), Sia (6), Eng. (7). For 

 "Tiguex" see under Cochiti (5), above, and Puaray Pueblo niin 

 [29:lt!f]. 



All of these names seem to have ajiplied originally only to the 

 Sandia-Isleta kind of Indians. It appears to have been more or 

 less known to Indians of ISJew Mexico since prehistoric times that 

 the Sandia-Isleta and TaosPicuris languages are ([uite closely re- 

 lated, and the names for the former have been applied more or less 

 also to the latter language and " tribe ". One Tewa informant said 

 of the Taos-Picuris merely Fotsq )my,hjv:mv((gl u-imu 'they are like 

 Tiwa' {PoUdnm^jiowa 'Tiwa', see Tewa (1), above; J^i 'they 3 + '; 

 7nu 'to be'). Some of the names for the Tewa sound much like 

 those designating the Tiwa. a fact which is likely to cause con- 

 fusion. 



Ute. Jntatawh (<Span. ?) {Jata perhaps from Span. Yuta 'Ute 

 Indian', of uncertain origin; tou'a 'people"). Many Indian lan- 

 guages have names for the Ute which closely resemble Span. 

 Yuta in sound. Cf. Jemez Jutd'o, plu. Jutd'of if plural postfix). 



Wichita. Witfit(ij)a?i(mi 'Wichita Pawnee' (Wttfita <Eng, 

 Wichita ; ^anawi 'Pawnee"). Cf. Pawnee. 



