and Son, →OCLC, page 97 F. O'Brien & J. Jennings (2001) Introduction to the Narragansett Language[1], Newport: Aquidneck Indian Council, →LCCN, page 89...
-(')sgw (“woman”) Quiripi: squah (“woman”) Nanticoke: ochquau (“woman”) Narragansett: squaw (“woman”) Penobscot: -skwe- (“woman”) Powhatan: -squa (“woman...
Massachusett: pauwau (“he uses divination; he practices magic or sorcery”) Narragansett: powwáw (“sorcerer, shaman, priest”) related terms: Central Algonquian:...
Eastern Algonquian: Massachusett: muhtugquash (or from *meʔtekwari ?) Narragansett: mihtuckquash (or from *meʔtekwari ?) *-a·xkw- Bulletin: Anthropological...
Abenaki: sôgmô, sôgemô Penobscot: sagəma Malecite-Passamaquoddy: sakom Narragansett: sachem → English: sachem Mohegan-Pequot: sôcum Unami: sakima Bloomfield...
Algonquian: *axkōk (“snake”) Abenaki: skog (“snake”) Penobscot: skok Narragansett: askug, askûg (“snake”) Massachusett: askꝏk Mohegan-Pequot: skok (“snake”)...
otuhk (“deer”) Mi'kmaq: lentug (“deer”) Massachusett: ottucke (“deer”) Narragansett: hütk (“deer”) Penobscot: átohke (“deer”) Unami: ahtuhw (“deer”) Munsee:...
(nequt pasuk(wog) (“one hundred”)) Mohegan-Pequot: pásuq (“hundred”) Narragansett: pawsuck (“hundred”) Cree peyak / ᐯᔭᐠ (peyak, “one”), piyak / ᐱᔭᐠ (piyak...
moz Penobscot: mos Malecite-Passamaquoddy: mus Massachusett: moos, mws Narragansett: moos Mohegan-Pequot: mos Mahican: mo-ose Lenape/Delaware: Unami: mus...
alúm Massachusett: anùm Mohegan-Pequot: ayumohs (“little dog, puppy”) Narragansett: ayím Quiripi: arsúm (“dog”), arrum Cheyenne Dictionary of Fisher, Leman...