Ediya,seeAdiyah.
Edjo.
African: tribes encroaching on Abyssinia.H. C.
Eelikinoo.
American:Sitkadialect of Chatham’s Strait.
Ehatsar.
American: name forMinetare.
Eijiquaijegi.
American: native name forGuaykuruof Cujaba.
Ejo.
African: same asOru.
Ek-afir.
African: a form of the wordKaffir.
Ekklemache.
American: tribe ofEskelenin California.
Ellikpur.
Indian: dialect ofGond.
Empungwa,seeMpongwe.
Enagua.
American: extinct tribe ofOmaguain Venezuela.
Enakaga.
American: dialect ofGuaykuru.
Encounter Bay.
Australian.See Eyre’s “Journal,” London, 1845.
Endeavour River.
Australian.See King’s “Narrative,” London, 1827.
English, Old.
A name forAnglo-Saxon, sometimes applied to early English. See Mätzner’s “Altenglische Sprachproben”; Rask’s Grammar, by Thorpe, London, 1865; Hyde Clarke’s “Comparative Philology of the English,” &c., London, 1859.
Enimaga.
American: name for the Kochaboth tribe ofGuaykuru.
Enua,underF.
Epic Greek.
That is, poetic forms of expression, as opposed to comic or tragic. See Pinzger’s “Formenlehre des Epischen,” Breslau, 1829.
Epigraphic,seeInscriptions.
Erigas.
American: quoted in Jülg’s “Vater” asIrokese.
Escopie,seeSkoffi.
Eurasian.
The name given in India to the Half-castes, or mixed progeny of Europeans and Asiatics. The Portuguese Half-castes speak Portuguese and Hindustani: the English ones English and Hindustani and Bengali.A. C.