Nope

Etymology
From a Wampanoag name for the island (or perhaps just for Gay Head, as 1841 cite).

Proper noun

 * 1)  Martha's Vineyard
 * 2) * 1848, By S. G. (Samuel Gardner) Drake, Biography and History of the Indians of North America, from Its First Discovery, B. B. Mussey, p. 118
 * Miohqsoo, or Myoxeo, was another noted Indian of Nope. He was a convert of Hiacoomes, whom he had sent for to inquire of him about his God.
 * 1) * 1853, Sarah Sprague Jacobs, Nonantum and Natick, Massachusetts Sabbath School Society, p. 189,
 * R. Gookin calls it Nope; other writers call it Capawack. It is the island known to us as Martha's Vineyard...As Mr Eliot's first convert, Waban, was, through life, a sober, upright man, so Hiacoomes, the first Christian Indian of Nope, always preserved an unspotted reputation.
 * 1) * 1895, Boston Colonial Society of Massachusetts, Transactions, Colonial Society of Massachusetts, p. 187,
 * Their story, as written by Daniel Gookin in 1674, is worth repeating: At the island of Nope, or Martha's Vineyard, about the year 1649, one of the first ...
 * 1) * 1895, Boston Colonial Society of Massachusetts, Transactions, Colonial Society of Massachusetts, p. 187,
 * Their story, as written by Daniel Gookin in 1674, is worth repeating: At the island of Nope, or Martha's Vineyard, about the year 1649, one of the first ...