BULL. 30] 



TIITBTA TLAKATLALA 



761 



fish, but by the Indians and English 

 titymagg. This word is evidently a cor- 

 ruption of tlie Chippewa atikaineg, in 

 Cree atikkamek, 'caribou fish,' from alVk, 

 'deer,' 'caribou,' and aniek, 'fish.' In 

 Rep. U. S. Fish Com. , 1894, attihmvhmeg is 

 given as a name of the Labrador whitefish 

 ( C. Labrad. ), another species. ( a. f. c. ) 



Tiubta. A village of the Kalendaruk 

 division of the Costanoan family, for- 

 merly connected with San Carlos mission, 

 Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20, 

 1860. 



Tiun {T/ah). a Haida town of the 

 Dostlan-lnagai family, formerly on the 

 w. coast of Graham id., s. of Port Lewis, 

 Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. In the 

 Skidegate dialect this is TII'gAU, which 

 is said to mean 'Slaughter village.' It 

 is probably the settlement referred to in 

 John Work's list (1846) as "Too," with 10 

 houses and 196 inhabitants. It was one 

 of the first places occurring in his list to 

 be abandoned. (j. r. s. ) 



Ti'Aij.— Swanton, Cont. Haida, 280, 281, 1905. 

 Tian Ilnige.— Harrison in Proc. Roy. Soc. Can., 

 sec. II, 124, 1895. Tli'gAn.— Swanton, op. cit. 

 Too.— Work (1S46) in Kane, Wand, in N.A.,app., 

 4,1859 (probably identical). 



Tivefocayo. Mentioned by Oviedo (Hist. 

 Gen. Indies, iii, 628, 1853) as one of the 

 provinces or villages visited by Ayllon. 

 The word owes its origin to a false divi- 

 sion of two succeeding names which 

 should read "Anicative [or rather Anica- 

 tiya], ^ocayo." The first is unidentified; 

 the second undoubtedly refers to the 

 Coosa of South Carolina. 



Tiyochesli ('dungs in the lodge'). A 

 modern Oglala Sioux band. 

 Tiyocesli. — Dorsey (after Cleveland) in 15th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 221, 1897. Tiyotcesli.— Ibid. 



Tiyochesli. A band of the Brule Teton 

 Sioux. 



Tiyocesli. — Dorsev (after Cleveland) in 15th Rep. 

 B. A. E.. 219, 1897'. Tiyotcesli.— Ibid. 



Tiyopaoshannunpa ('smokes at the en- 

 trance to the lodge ' ). A band of the Sans 

 Arcs Sioux. 



Tiyopa-ocagnugpa.— Dor.sey in 1.5th Rep. B. A. E., 

 219, 1897. Tiyopa-otca°nu"pa.— Ibid. 



Tizaptan ( ' five lodges ' ) . A Sisseton 

 Sioux band. 



Ti-zapta".— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 217, 1897. 

 Ti-zaptar). — Ibid. Tizaptai}na. — S. R. Riggs, letter 

 to Dorsey, 1882. 



Tizaptan. A Sihasapa Sioux band; per- 

 haps the same as Glaglahesha. — Swift, 

 letter to J. O. Dorsey, 1884. 



Tizhu. A Quapaw gens, now extinct. 

 Ti'ju.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 230, 1897. 



Tizonazo. A former Tepehuane pueblo 

 in Durango, Mexico, which, according to 

 Orozeo y Berra, was occupied by people 

 of the Salineros and Cabezas tribes until 

 they participated in the rebellion of the 

 Toboso, when they were exterminated 

 and the pueblo repeopled with Opata 

 from Ures (q. v.), in Sonora. 

 S.Jose del Tizonazo.— Orozeo y Bcrra, Geog., 318, 

 1864. Tizonazo.— Zapata (1678) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 

 4th s.,III, 310, 1857. 



Tizsessinaye ( 'little cotton wood jungle' ). 

 An Apache clan or band at San Carlos and 

 Ft Apache, Ariz., in 1881; corresponding 

 to the Titsessinaye and the Destchetinaye 

 among the Pinal Coyotero. 

 Chiz-ches-che-nay.— White, Apache names of Ind. 

 Tribes, MS., B. A.E. (trans, 'rocky country and 

 woodv country'). Tit-sessinaye. — Bourke in 

 Jour. Am. Folk-lore, III, 112, 1890. 



Tkeiktskune {Tx-e'ix'tskune). A Bella- 

 coola village on the n. side of Bellacoola 

 r., Brit. Col., near its mouth. It was one 

 of the eight villages called Nuhalk. 

 NutHe'iHtskone. — Boas in 7tti Rep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can., 3, 1891. Tx-e'ixtskune. — Boas in Mem. Am. 

 Mus. Nat. Hi.st., II, 49, 1900. 



Tkhakiyu. A Yaquina village on the 

 N. side of Yaquina r., Oreg., on a small 

 stream e. of Newport. 



T'k'qa'-ki-yu. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 229, 1890. 



Tkhlunkhastunne. A band of the Mi- 

 shikhwutmetunne, who dwelt on Upper 

 Coquille r., Oreg., next to the Kusan and 

 below Coquille City. 



Tqlun-qas' ^unne'. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 232, 1890. 



Tkimeye. A Kuitsh village at Win- 

 chester bay, near Umpqua r., Oreg. 

 Tki'-mi-ye'. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 

 231, 1890. 



Tktakai [T'k'takai, 'vine-maple'). A 

 Squawmish village on the right bank of 

 Squawmisht r., Brit. Col. — Hill-Tout in 

 Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 474, 1900. 



Tkulmashaauk. A Yaquina village on 

 the s. side of Yaquina r., Oreg. 

 T'kiil-ma'-ca-auk'. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 229, 1890. 



Tkwakwamish. A former Salish division 

 on Puyallup r. and Vashon id., Wash.; 

 pop. about 50 in 1853. 



T'Kawkwamish.— Gibbs in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 

 178, 1877. T'kwakwamish.— Gibbs quoted bv Dall 

 in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 241, 1877. T'Gua-qua- 

 mish.— Gibbs in Pac. R. R. Rep., i, 435, 1855. 



Tkwuratum. Given as an Okinagan 

 band at the mouth of Okinakane r.,Wash. 

 T'Kwuratum.— Gibbs in Pac. R. R. Rep., i, 412, 

 1855. 



Tlaaluis {^aa^luts). One of the five 

 original septs of the Lekwiltok, living on 

 the coast of British Columbia between 

 Bute and Loughborough inlets. After 

 the great war between the Kwakiutl and 

 the Salish they were so reduced in num- 

 bers that they joined the Kueha as an- 

 other gens, (j. R. s. ) 

 A-wa-oo.— Dawson in Trans. Rov. Soc. Can., sec. 

 II, 65, 1887. Clal-lu-i-is.— Kane, Wand, in N. A., 

 app., 1859. LaaTuis. — Boas in Rep. U. S. Nat. 

 Mus. 1895, 332, 1897. Xlaaluis.— Boas in Peter- 

 manns Mitteil., pt. 6, 131, 1887. 



Tlachtana ( ' weavers of grass mats ' ) . 

 A Knaiakhotana clan of Cook inlet, 

 Alaska. — Richardson, Arct. Exped., i, 

 406, 1851. , 



Tlaiq (T/aiq). A Wikeno village on 

 Rivers inlet, Brit. Col. — Boas in Peter- 

 manns Mitteil., pt. 5, 130, 1887. 



Tlakatlala {Ld'qaLala). A Chinookan 

 tribe formerly living on the n. bank of 

 Columbia r. in Cowlitz co., Wash., about 



