MooNKYi GLOSSARY 513 



C'liA'iTAXoocA — sec Tydirtiiii'ijl. 



Chattooga, ("iiATf<;A — see Tmlu'gl. 



Cheeowhek — see Txiyd'M. 



Cheerake — see Tm'ldifi, uiiiler "Tribal Synonymy," page 182. 



Cheowa — see Txii/d'li'i. 



CiiEowA Maximum — see Sehwote'i/'i. 



CnERACiri — see TsU'UkjI, under "Tribal Synonymy," page 182. 



Cheraw — see Ani'Suwa'tt. 



Cherokee — see Tsit'lai/I, under "Tribal Synonymy," page 182; also ElAwd'diyt. 



C H EST ATEE — See .1 txi'i ri'ahfli' 1/1 . 



Chestua — see Tsixtii'ijl. 



Cheucunsexe — see Txi' iin-gurm' itl. 



Cfieulaii — mentioned by Timberlake as the chief of Settacoo {SVtikfi) in 1762. The 



name may be intended for Tm'ld, "Fox." 

 Ch ick am AUG a — see Tsl'kHmu'gl. 

 Chilhowee — see TsuUxn'we. 

 Chimney Tops — see Duni'skwdlg&n'l. 

 Cm.scA — mentioned in the De Soto narratives as a mining region in the Clierokee 



country. The name may have a connection with Tsi'skiva, "bird," possibly 



TxwkmVJu. "Bird place." 

 Choastea — see TmMa'yi. 

 Chopped Oak — see DigCdu'y&lUn'j/t. 

 Choquata — see Ilsd'Cl. 

 Chota, Chotte- — see Ilsd'ti. 

 CiTico — see St'tiku'. 

 Clear-skv — see Iskagua. 

 Clennuse — see Tkmusi'yl. 

 Cleveland — see Tmteld'yi. 

 CogA — ^see Aiu'-Ku'sd. 

 Coco — see KtiktV. 

 CoHUTT.\ — see GaMi'n. 

 Colanneh, Colona — see Kd'lanu. 

 CoNASAUGA — see Gamd'gl. 

 CoxxEROss — see KCivxin'-urd'sdilyt. 

 COOWEESCOOWEE — See Gu'irittgiiwl'. 



CoosA — see Ani'-Ku'.iit and KitsA'. 



CooSAWATEE — See fCii'xdweti'yt. 



CORANI — see Kd'ldnu. 



CossA — see .•l»u'-A'u',so, Kui><i. 



Cowee' — see Kmm'yl. 



CovvEETA, Coweta — see Ani'-Kawl'tA. 



Covatee (variously spelled Cawatie, Coiatee, Coytee, Coytoy, Kai-a-tee) — ^A former 

 Cherokee settlement on Little Tennessee river, some ten miles below the junc- 

 tion of Tellico, about the present Coytee post-office in Loudon county, Tennessee. 

 The correct form and etymology are uncertain. 



t 'heek-1'ath — see Ku'm-iiuHinVht. 



Crow-towx — see Kdyun'ifi. 



CuHTAHL.vrAH — a Cherokee woman noted in the Wahuenauhi manuscript as having 

 distinguished herself by bravery in battle. The proper form may have some con- 

 nection with gatun'KUt, "wild hemp." 



CiLLASAGEE — See Ktdge'lu'yl. 



CULLOWHEE, CURRAHEE — See Gdldhi'ljl. 



CurrAWA — see KUu'hwii. 



lit ETH— 01- ^38 



