sungi—mink; also onion; the name seems to refer to a smell; the various minks are called generically, gaw sunʻgi.
Sukiʻyi—another form of Sakwiʻyi, q. v.
suʻliʻ—buzzard; the Creek name is the same.
Sun Land—see Nundaʻyi.
suʻsaʻ-saiʻ—an unmeaning song refrain.
suʻtalidihiʻ—see nunʻdaʻ.
Suwaʻli-nunnaʻhi (abbreviated Suwaʻli-nunnaʻhi)—“Suwali train,” the proper name for the gap at the head of Swannanoa (from Suwaʻli-Nunʻnaʻ) river east of Asheville, in Buncombe county, N. C.
Suwaʻni—a former Cherokee settlement on Chattahoochee river, about the present Suwanee, in Gwinnett county, Ga. The name has no meaning in the Cherokee language and is said to be of Creek origin.
Suyeʻta—“the Chosen One,” from asuyeʻta, “he is chosen,” gasuʻyeu, “I am choosing”; the same form, suyeʻta, could also mean mixed, from gasuʻyahu, “I am mixing it.” A masculine name at present borne by a prominent ex-chief and informant upon the East Cherokee reservation.
Swannanoa—see Wuwaʻli-nunnaʻhi.