. Bulletin. Ethnology. LILLOOET MAN. (am. Mus. Nat. Hist.) 1872. Sta'-tlum-ooh.—Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. 11. 5,1891. Stetlum.—Survey raap,"llydr. Office, Stlat-limuh.—ALk ka\ quoted by Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. C m i( i 1^ '1 LILLOOET WOMAN. (am. Mus. Nat. HiST. ) II, 5. StIa'tliumH.—Boas m 5tli Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 10, 1889 (own name). Stla'tliumQ.—Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 80, 1890. Stla'tlumQ.— Boas as quoted by in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can. for 1891, see. ii, 5. Lillooet. A band and town of Upper Lillooet on Fraser r., where it is join
. Bulletin. Ethnology. LILLOOET MAN. (am. Mus. Nat. Hist.) 1872. Sta'-tlum-ooh.—Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. 11. 5,1891. Stetlum.—Survey raap,"llydr. Office, Stlat-limuh.—ALk ka\ quoted by Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. C m i( i 1^ '1 LILLOOET WOMAN. (am. Mus. Nat. HiST. ) II, 5. StIa'tliumH.—Boas m 5tli Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 10, 1889 (own name). Stla'tliumQ.—Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 80, 1890. Stla'tlumQ.— Boas as quoted by in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can. for 1891, see. ii, 5. Lillooet. A band and town of Upper Lillooet on Fraser r., where it is joined )jy Cayoosh cr. The Canadian Reports on Indian Affairs give two divisions of the Lillooet band, of which one numbered 57 and the other 6 in 1904. Lillooet.—Can. Ind. AfT. Rep., pt. ll, 72, 1902. SEtL.—Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ii, 172, 1900 (native name of the village of Lillooet). Lilmalche (Lemd'tha). One of the two Cowichan tribes on Thetis id., off the s. e. coast of Vancouver id.; pop. 19 in 190-1. (liven as a band of the Penelakut (q. v.) by the Canadian Indian Office. Lema'^/ca.—Boas, MS., B. A. E., 18S7. Lilmalche.— Ci';,pt. II, 101. Ll-mache.—Ibid., 1897,302,1898. Ll-mal-che.—Ibid., 1898, 417. Llmal- ches.—Il>id., , 190. Lilshiknom. A branch of the Yuki who lived on the w. bank of Eel r., a short distance below the junction of Middle fork and South Eel r., n. Cal. (a. l. k. ) Lincoln Island. An island in Penobscot r., ]Me., near Lincoln, 37 ni. aboveOldtown, occupied by about 30 Penobscot Indians. Lincoln.—So called bv the whites. Uadnaguk.— Gatschet, Penobscot MS., B. A. E., 1887 (Penob- scot name). Linguistic families. The linguistic di- versity of the Indians is perhaps the most remarkable feature of American ethnolo- gy. While certain general features, such, for example, as incorporation, use of verb and pronoun, employment of generic par- ticles, use of nongrammatical genders, etc., usually occur, m
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