HULL. 30] 



NKUOOSAl NOGELING 



79 



Squawmisht r., Brit. Col. — Ilill-Tmit in 

 Rep. Brit. A. A. 8., 474, 1900. 



Nkuoosai ( A7,m7o8(n). A Squawmish 

 gens living on Howe sd., coast of British 

 Columbia.— Boas, MS., B. A. E., 18S7._ 



Nkuoukten ( yLiK'/nL-teii ) . A Squawmish 

 geus living on Howe sd., coast of British 

 Columbia.— Boas, MS., B. A. E., 1887. 



Nkya ( Xi/tia, from iiqa/iEx, 'to swim'). 

 A village of the Lytton band of Ntlak- 

 ya)»amuk on tlie w. side of Eraser r., Brit. 

 Col., 2 m. below Lytton. Pop. 71 in 1901, 

 the last time the name appears. 

 Macaiyah.— Brit. Col. uiup. Iiid. Aflf., Victoria, 

 1S72. Macayah.— Can. Iiid. AfT., 79, 1878. Ni- 

 kai'-a.— Dawson in Trans. R<n-. Soc. Can., sec. ll, 

 44, 1891. N'kai'a.— Hill-Tout in Keii. Ethnol. 

 Surv. Can., 4. ].s99. Nkaih.— Can. Ind. Aft'., 3l>3, 

 1897 (confusfd with Nkaih, <). v.) . Nkya.— Ibid., 

 pt. II, 164, 1901. Nqa'ia.— Tcit in IMeni. Am. Mus. 

 Nat. Hist., ir, 171, 1900. Nyakai.— Can. Ind. Aff. 

 1898. 418, 1899. 



Nma {N'-iita^, 'sturgeon'). A gens of 

 the Pdtawatomi. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 

 167, 1877. 



Nmapena. { X' -nid-pe-nd^ , 'carp'). A 

 gens of the Potawatomi. — Morgan, Anc. 

 Soc., 167, 1877. 



No ('beloved town'). A Calusa vil- 

 lage on the s. w. coast of Elorida in the 

 latter part of the 16th century. 

 No.— Fontaneda {en. Iii75), Meni.,'smith tran.s., 

 19, 18.54. Non.— Fontaneda in Doc. InM., v, 538, 

 IStiti. 



Noamlaki (Ilmawi: 'western dwell- 

 ers.' — Curtiii). A Wintun tribe formerly 

 living on Long, Thomes, and Elder crs., 

 in the mountains and on the edge of the 

 plains in Colu.^a and Tehama cos., Cal. 

 Nomee Lacks. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, June 8, 

 ISt'iO. Nome-Lackees. — Ceiger in Ind. Aff. Rep. 

 18.59, 438, 1860. Numleki.— Curtin, Ilmawi MS. 

 vocab., B.A.E., 1889 ('west dwellers': given as 

 Ilmawi nameof the Wintun). Tehamas. — Hittell, 

 Hi.st. Cal., I, 731, 1898. Titkainenom.— A. L. 

 Krocber, inf'n. 1903 (Yuki name). 



Noatak. A Nunatogmint settlement on 

 the lower part of Noatak r., in n. w. 

 Alaska. 



Noatagamutes. — Fetroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 

 60, 18M. Noatak.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 

 464, 1906. 



Nobscusset. A village, perhaps of the 

 Nauset, that was subject to the VVampa- 

 noag; situated near the present Dennis, 

 Barnstable co., ]Ma.«s. In 1685 it was a 

 village of the Praying Indians. 

 Nabsquassets. — Hoyt, Antiq. Re.s., 89, 18'24. Nobs- 

 cussett, — Hinckley (1685) in Mass. Hist. Soc. 

 Coll., 4th .s., V, 133, 1861. Nobsqassit.— Drake, 

 Bk. Inds., hk. 2, 118, 1.S48. Nobsquasitt— Gookin 

 (1674) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 1st s., I, 148, 1806. 

 Nobsquassit. — Bourne (1674), ibid., 197. 



Nocake. Parched corn-meal, a dish 

 which the I'.nglish colonists adopted, with 

 its name, from the Algonquian tribes of 

 New England. Roger Williams (Key to 

 Am. Lang., 11, 1648) defines the Narra- 

 gansetiiokeJiIck as "parched meal, which 

 is a readie very wholesome food, which 

 they eat with a little water." The Massa- 

 chuset form as given by Eliot is nookhic, 

 the same as nukldk: Wood, in 1634, uses 

 the form nocake; Palfrey (New Eng., i. 



28, 1858) has nookhik. The word signi- 

 fies 'it is soft'. (a. f. c. ) 



Nochak. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on Chulitna r., Alaska; pop. 28 in 

 1890. 



Noh-chamiut.— Eleventh Census, Alaska, 164, 1893 

 (the people). 



Nochpeem. A tribe or band of the 

 Wappinger confederacy formerly occu- 

 pying the E. bank of the Hudson about 

 the site of INIatteawan, Dutchess co., N. Y. 

 De Laet locates here the Pachami, but 

 Ruttenber says these may have ))een the 

 Tankitekes, and, indeed, a chief of the 

 latter bore the name I'acham or Pachem. 

 They had a village called Nochpeem, 

 and others called Keskistkonk and Pas- 

 quasheck, but their principal one seems 

 to have been called Canopus, from their 

 chief. (.r. M.) 



Highlanders.— Doc. of 1660 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., 

 xin, isj, issi. Highland Indians, — Doc. of 1655, 

 ibid., h-1. Hogelanders.— Hreeden Raedt {ra. 1630) 

 quoted by Rutteuber, Tribes Hud.son R., 80, ix'l 

 (Dutch form). Noch-Peem. — Van der Donck 

 (16.56 ) quoted by Ruttenber, ibid., 72. Nochpeem. — 

 Treaty of 1644 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., Xlll, 17, 

 1881. Pachami.— Map (ca. 1614), ibid., I, 1856. 

 Pachamins.— De Laet (1633) in N. Y. Hist. Soc. 

 Coll., 2ds., I, 308, 1841. 



Nockay-Delklinne. See Nahiidoklini. 



Nocos. A Chumashan village between 

 Goletaand PtConcepcion, Cal.,in 1542. — 

 Cabrillo ( 1542 ) in Smith, Colec. Doc. Fla., 

 183, 1857. 



Nocto. A former Chumashan village 

 near Purisima mission, Santa Barbara 

 CO., Cal. — Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 

 18, 1861. 



Noewe. Mentioned by Bartram (Trav- 

 els, 371, 1792) as a Cherokee settlement, 

 about 1775, on the upper waters of Ten- 

 nessee r. , apparently in w. North Car- 

 olina. The form can not be certainly 

 identified, but it may be intended for 

 Nayij'hi, 'sand place,' or Nuiiya'hi, 

 'rock place.' Ci. Nioive. (.i. m.) 



Nogaie {No-ga^-ie). A Paviotso tribe 

 of four bands, formerly living in n. e. 

 Nevada, in the vicinity of Robinson dis- 

 trict, Spring valley, Duckwater, and 

 White r. valley; poji. 200 in 1873. — 

 Powell in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 52, 1874. 



Nogal (Span. ' walnut' ). A settlement 

 of the Huichol to which emigrated those 

 who once lived at Aguas Azules; situated 

 s. w. of Santa Catarina, in Jalisco, Mex- 

 ico. The place was afterward taken pos- 

 session of by IMexican settlers, ])ut now 

 the Huichol are permitted to reside 

 therein. — Lumholtz, Unknown Mex., ii, 

 256, 1902. 



Nogales ( Span. : ' walnuts ' ) . A ruined 

 pueblo s. of the malpais or lava beds in 

 s. E. New Mexico. — Bandelier in Arch. 

 Inst. Rep., v, 88, 1884. 



Nogeling. A Kiatagmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on the outletof L. Clark, Alaska; pop. 

 It; in 1890. 



Noghelingamiut. — Eleventh Census, Alaska, 164, 

 1893 (the people). 



