Cotocochuniname of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
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Coyaname of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Eclavouname of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Edelanoname of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Elanoname of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Elanoguename of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Eloqualename of a Timucua chiefdom9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Enacapename of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Eponame of a Timucua cacique9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Equalename of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Escamaçuname of a Timucua province9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Espogachename of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Euacappename of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Filachename of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Guacara1name of a Timucua town and river9.7.2Name of a placeConfident2component of a mission and river name9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Guadalquinicomponent of a town namePossibly this name is confused with the Spanish place name Guadalquivir or other Spanish place names that begin with Guadal... [Ultimately from Arabic, borrowed into Spanish.]9.7.2Name of a place
Guanochename of a townIt is likely that this is a Guale town, and not a Timucua town.9.7.2Name of a placeConfident
Helacacomponent of a mission name9.7.2Name of a place
Hicachiriconame of a Timucua town9.7.2Name of a placeConfidentcomp ofhicavillagechiricosmallsp. var.Hicacharico
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Ibiniutiname of a Timucua province9.7.2Name of a placeConfidentcomp ofibinewaterutiearth country place
Ivitachucoibitatʃukoname of a former Timucua town in Madison County, Florida.The first part of this town name is certainly 'river', but the second part might be from Apalachee coko 'dwelling place, house' instead of the Timucua chucu 'squash' or chucu 'black, dirty'. The word is somewhat unusual from a phonological point of view because most native Timucua words require round vowels in the last two syllables of a word to be identical. (Either CuCu or CoCo, but not CuCo.) Spanish loans are an exception, so if chuco is a loan from Apalachee, this might explain the unusual phonology.9.7.2Name of a placeConfidentcomp. ofibitariver
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Mauquinaname of a Timucua cacique9.7.2Name of a placeConfident