n. a chant from a Lakota Indian Ghost Dance asserting “a claim to the land and its resources” (S. E. Wilmer, Theatre, Society and the Nation: Staging American Identities).
e-e-e-e.
n. an “ejaculation of wordless awe’ in “Social Control in an African Society” by the Boston University African Studies Center (1963).
E-u.
n. a populated place in the Shan State region of Myanmar (formerly Burma).
Ea.
n. a Basque town in Spain.
<My father ... was born in Ea, Spain in 1926. —Jess M. Nachiondo.>
n. a capital in the Tarabulus region of Libya.
n. Babylonian God of wisdom, the sea, and patron of the healing arts.
<In Babylonia the great god Ea was reputed to be the inventor of magic, and his son Marduk, the chief deity of Babylon, inherited the art from his father. —Sir James George Frazer, The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion.>