Sign Language Among North American Indians Compared With That Among Other Peoples And Deaf-Mutes - First Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the - Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1879-1880, - Government Printing Office, Washington, 1881, by Garrick Mallery
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page 7 of 513 (01%)
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197. "I hear, but your words are from a bad heart." Ojibwa 376
198. Hearing serpent. Ojibwa pictograph 376 199. Royal edict. Maya 377 200. To kill. Dakota 377 201. "Killed Arm." Dakota 377 202. Pictograph, including "kill." Wyoming Ter. 378 203. Pictograph, including "kill." Wyoming Ter. 378 204. Pictograph, including "kill." Wyoming Ter. 379 205. Veneration. Egyptian character 379 206. Mercy. Supplication, favor. Egyptian 379 207. Supplication. Mexican pictograph 380 208. Smoke. Ib. 380 209. Fire. Ib. 381 210. "Making medicine." Conjuration. Dakota 381 211. Meda. Ojibwa pictograph 381 212. The God Knuphis. Egyptian 381 213. The God Knuphis. Ib. 381 214. Power. Ojibwa pictograph 381 215. Meda's Power. Ib. 381 216. Trade pictograph 382 217. Offering. Mexican pictograph 382 218. Stampede of horses. Dakota 382 219. Chapultepec. Mexican pictograph 383 220. Soil. Ib. 383 221. Cultivated soil. Ib. 383 222. Road, path. Ib. 383 223. Cross-roads and gesture sign. Mexican pictograph 383 224. Small-pox or measles. Dakota 383 225. "No thoroughfare." Pictograph 383 226. Raising of war party. Dakota 384 |
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