352 



Place-names. 

 Ihisissoq 



Sissokajuk 



Ujara'H 



Qo'rorsuaq 



Sorqaq 



Sermmia 



Sissirja 



NarsiTiasoq 



Mal^arOarçtik 



Kariimusammisoq 



Qa'vsoq 



Kusinerssuaq 



TJmiartor<pik 



Qan^erpaVnk 



Sisfiaha^ss^a'H 



Sermersuaq 

 Iwiätiarnät 



l'>"na'7'sii7iuaq 

 Lmiusarsnaq 



If^er/Jeq 



Qepporsuit 

 Im^ikiättoq 

 Assakaimuit 



Sermmia 



Tran«lations (F^tymologyi. ' Remarks. 



?that which lies iu the direc- , 

 tion of the interior ! 



?the one that frequently 



slides down 

 its stones I 



the big cleft 

 a whalebone 



its (the inland's) ice glacier 



its fox-hole 

 the snub-nos^d one 

 place where the head is 



generally bent back 

 the one that is turned in the 



direction of the inland 

 ' a broad-topped cliff 

 the big river-bed i 



'. place to which thev used to deserted Eskimo settle- 



go in row-boats {umiaqs) raent 

 the one that resembles a : 

 mouth in appearance (or 

 ' in sound) 



! the hideous (impassable) 

 t stones that have slid down 

 j the large glacier 

 i resembling a woman's breasts 

 (or the udders of a female 

 animal) 

 the peculiar little bluff 

 '■ ?the big one which resembles 

 a curtain in a Greenlandic 

 tent 

 the one that is deepest down deserted Eskimo settle- 



in the valley or farthest 



in in the bay 

 the big avalanches of stone 

 warm water 

 the little ones that roll 



around or roll down | 

 its (the inland's) ice (glacier) | 



ment 



with a little river 



