Gunneʻhi—see Nunneʻhi.
Gunskaliʻski—a masculine personal name of uncertain etymology.
Gunters Landing, Guntersville—see Kuʻsa-Nunnaʻhi.
Gun-tuskwaʻli—“short arrows,” from guni, arrow, and tsuskwaʻli, plural of uskaʻli, short; a traditional western tribe.
Gununʻdaʻleʻgi—see Nunna-hiʻdihi.
Gustiʻ—a traditional Cherokee settlement on Tennessee river, near Kingston, Roane Co., Tenn. The name cannot be analyzed.
Guʻwisguwiʻ—The Cherokee name of the chief John Ross, and for the district named in his honor, commonly spelled Cooweescoowee. Properly an onomatope for a large bird said to have been seen formerly at infrequent intervals in the old Cherokee country, accompanying the migratory wild geese, and described as resembling a large snipe, with yellow legs and unwebbed feet. In boyhood John Ross was known as Tsanʻusdi, “Little John.”
Gwalʻgaʻhi—“Frog-place,” from gwalʻgu, a variety of frog, and hi, locative. A place on Hiwassee river, just above the junction of Peachtree creek, near Murphy, in Cherokee Co., N. C.; about 1755 the site of a village of refugee Natchez, and later of a Baptist mission.
gweheʻ—a cricket’s cry.
Ha!—an introductory exclamation intended to attract attention or add emphasis; about equivalent to Here! Now!