Taka, Takue.

African: names for the Beja or Boje.

Takazze.

African: dialect of Agau; also called Tscherat-Agaw. See [Tacazze].

Takeli, Tuklave.

African: dialect of the frontier of Kordovan. Rüppel’s vocabulary connects it with the Shabun, Fertit, and Koldagi more closely than with the Furian and Shiluk. R. G. L.

Takulli, Tahkali.

American: also called Carrier, Nagail, and Chin. It is the Athabaskan of New Caledonia, spoken on the upper part of Frazer’s River. Authorities—A. Mackenzie: “Voyages,” &c., London, 1801; D. W. Harmon: “A Journal of Voyages and Travels,” Andover, 1820; H. Hale: “Ethnology and Philology,” Philadelphia, 1846. The last of these uses the compound Tahkali-Umpqua as a class name for the ordinary Takulli, and the outlying members of the Athabaskan class in the south of Oregon. R. G. L.

Takun.

Used in Jülg’s edition of “Vater” for the orang-benua of Malacca; apparently Jakun.