368 



Place-names. 

 Qeqertaq 



Ukulilik 

 Mapparsuit 



Nioqcnmarssuk 



Umiarso'ssaq 



Nättoialik 



Niaqo7-narsHSSuaq 

 Per^erijotaq 



Näsuuit 

 Nät'ernaq 



TuttO(jujasoq 



Serif ar tuq 

 AliirirforÀen 



Alä7/riOJAä-ra 

 Qeqei'taxiistiuk 



A-"lät*iu4k 



Iti" /J.eq 



Sar<pareuaq 



Translations (Etymoloevi. 

 the island 



the one which has haies | 

 the big clay-plains 



the peculiar head (a шоип- 



taiu-knoll resembling a 



head at the end of a tongue 



of land) 

 the one which resembles 



an umiak (boat rowed by 



women) 

 the one that has an eagle 



(eagle's nest?) 

 the b'v^ Niaqornarsuk (v. s.). i 

 ? <1 perk'uk, storm, i. e. the { 



place which attracts the I 



storm i 



I 



the horns 



i which resembles a floor (just 

 as flat) I 



the place where one easily 

 may encounter reindeer 



the black guillemot-catcher 



the one that is farthest over 

 in the direction of the 

 shady side 



the little AlHri'orXeq (v. s.) 



the strange or curious island 

 {-sussuk, curious?) 



place where there is distur- 

 bance or whirls (in the 

 water) 



carry-over-place (small 



tongue of land between two 

 bodies of water where one \ 

 can carry the boat over 



the strong current 



Keniarks 

 the largest island in 



the group 

 island 

 between Arqittoq and 



Niaqornarsuk 

 mountain and Eskimo 



settlement (r.s^ir/ 



N. lat ) 



island 



mountain 



island 

 island 



island 



large island east of the 



three small ones 

 Eskimo settlement 



(6S°ll' N. lat.) 



Eskimo summ I.' 1- settle- 

 ment 



narrowing of the fjord 



