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"A Study of Pueblo Architecture: Tusayan and Cibola Eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1886-1887, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1891, pages 3-228"


W[)i]na?k??i Projecting poles; rafters extending beyond the
walls.
Bal?kakini "Spread out;" the floor.
O?tcokp??h "Leveled with stones;" a raised level for the
foundation.
Ba?lkakini t??wi "Floor ledge;" the floor of one room raised above
that of an adjoining one.
Hako?la "Lower place;" the floor of a lower room. Sand
dunes in a valley are called "Hakolpi."
Ko?ltci A shelf.
Owako?ltci A stone shelf.
Ta?p? k??ita A support for a shelf.
Wina?koltci A hewn plank shelf.
Koki?ni A wooden peg in a wall.
T?leta A shelf hanging from the ceiling.
T?let?haipi The cords for suspending a shelf.
T?k?lci A niche in the wall.
T?k?li A stone mortar.
Ma?ta The complete mealing apparatus for grinding corn.
Owa?mata The trough or outer frame of stone slabs.
Mata?ki The metate or grinding slab.
Kakom?ta mata?ki The coarsest grinding slab.
Tala?k? mata?ki The next finer slab; from "talaki" to parch
crushed corn in a vessel at the fire.
Pi??ny?mta mata?ki The slab of finest texture; from "pin," fine.
Ma?ta ??tci The upright partition stones separating the
metates. The rubbing stones have the same names
as the metates.


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