Talk:kinnikinnick

More alternative forms
which get &gt;1 but &lt;3 BGC hits: kinikenick, kinnikinnich (2), kinekinick, kinekinic, kinikennick, killekinic (2), kinnekinneck, kinnekinnek, kinnekineck, kinnekinec, kinekineck, kinekinek, kinnikinnec, kinnikinnek, kinikinnec, kennikennik, kennickenick, kinnakinnik, kinnakinick, kinnickinnich (1), k'neck-k'neck, k'neck k'nick, k'nick-k'nick (1); kinnikineck (4 hits, but 3 are mentions). killickenick may also be marginally attested. Many other spellings, like kilickenick, are attested as placenames and in German. - -sche (discuss) 02:35, 6 March 2013 (UTC)

- -sche (discuss) 05:00, 14 February 2021 (UTC)
 * 1890, Samuel Hazard, John Blair Linn, William Henry Egle, George Edward Reed, Thomas Lynch Montgomery, Gertrude MacKinney, Charles Francis Hoban, Pennsylvania Archives, page 181:
 * The vanilla of South America, has been applied by the Spanish manufacturers of tobacco, in various ways; it is strange, that we have never assayed the Killekinic.*
 * 1895, Charles Henri Leonard, The Pocket Materia Medica and Therapeutics, page 354:
 * Kinnikinnich bark; see Cornus
 * 1906, Empire Review, page 465:
 * On either bank were freshly torn limbs of the “choke” cherry tree, cranberry, and “kinnikinnich” willow, the latter bearing a white acrid fruit very attractive to Bruin&#39;s palate.
 * 1927, Constance Lindsay Skinner, Roselle of the North, New York : Macmillan:
 * When they arrived where he was, they would always find Little Brown Crane sitting on a log or a hummock of grass, smoking his pipe of dried red willow bark, or of K&#39;nick&#39;nick, which is the leaf of a vine and
 * 1968, John Joseph Henry, An Accurate and Interesting Account of Heroes in the Campaign Against Quebec in 1775, New York : Johnson Reprint Corporation:
 * A half part of Red-willow bark, added to as much of the dryed sumach forms the killekinic. Those ingredients added to a third part of leaf tobacco, and the mass rubbed finely together in the palm of the hand, makes that delicious fume, so ...
 * 2005, Lorle Porter, Politics & Peril: Mount Vernon, Ohio in the Nineteenth Century, Equine Graphics Publishing Group (ISBN 9781887932257), page 21:
 * Indians brought furs, and maple syrup; the merchant presented tobacco; they mixed it with kinnickinnich (sumac) bark to smoke.