Many Aboriginal groups go by two names—what they call themselves and the name given them by the early Europeans. Below are a few examples
Huron
French for ‘bristly’. Huron referred to the to the distinctive headdress of the ‘Wendat’ or ‘Wyandot’ which means ‘Island People’.
Iroquois
Algonkian for ‘rattlesnakes’. Their own name ‘Haudenosaunee’ means ‘People of the long house’.
Ojibwa
(Ojibway, Ojibwe, and Chippewa)
Means ‘puckered up’, and refers to the stitching on moccasins. Originally known as ‘Anishinabe’, meaning ‘real people’.
Sioux
Short for the Ojibwa term ‘nadouessiox’, meaning ‘adders’. The oldest primary designations are Lakato or Dakota which are variant terms for ‘allies’.