Apple River, Cumberland
County.
Sand River, Cumberland
County.
abundance of things; plenty of
ground-nuts; hence Acadie (French).
Duck land.
Hence the French name Canard River.
a creeping blackberry
vine.
a headland on the Atlantic.
there is wet snow and ice
there.
the first lake as you ascend a
river.
opening out through rocks,
as Penobscot.
a water passage between two
lakes.
the birch bark will easily
peel.
fire; hence fire-water;
alcohol.
Mill Creek on the River
Hebert in Cumberland County
Charlottetown Harbor, Prince
Edward Island.
winding through the
wilderness; River John.
facing the frowning cliff;
Canso.
flowing through the sand;
Casenmpec, P.E. Island.
clam diggings; Boot
Island, Horton.
Halifax, from Ukchebookt, the
largest harbor or bay.
a rattle; an Indian
tambourine.
roseberries; also
the name of an orange.
Hardwood Ridge,
Cumberland.
Bear River in
Nova Scotia.
anchored on the wave; Prince
Edward Island.
to eat raw flesh; hence the
name of the eskimo Indians, eaters of raw flesh.
Point Skimenack, in New
Brunswick.
high land. Green Hill,
Pictou County.
Gaspe; far into the water.
a manitou who dwelt in the
Bay of Fundy, at Blomidon.
the home of the
sea-cow; Quaco, New Brunswick.
a place of dried meat; now
Hantsport, in Hants County.
a shovel. Hence
Kaleboo,
carbou, the shoveller, because they shovel up the snow with their broad feet in
digging down for the moss on which they feed.
the stream that connects
two lakes. The six lakes on the Liverpool River, as you go up stream:
Panook
Little River, a branch of
the Restigouche.
Sandy Point, now Economy, in
Colchester County.
an aged porpoise or seal.
Micmac word meaning
aged porcupine