280 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



[bull. 47 



scendanta and those of the female 

 decendants of real or potential brothers 

 and sisters {yaWndiyan, {mMo'ndiya'"'; 

 voc, yinkV). 



tpa'ihi'i', any soft part of the body. — 

 ayVtjianhin or ayitpan^hinyan, the hypo- 

 gastric and iliac regions, nixuxwi tpaP'- 

 7u", "the soft part of the ear," the ear 

 lobe, ptdi'"' ahudi tpanhin, "the soft 

 bone of the nose," the nasal septum. 



tpe, tape' (28: 207, 208, 210), (1) any natu- 

 ral orifice in the human body. — nixu'xti 

 tpe', the meatus auditorius. hitetV tpe', 

 the anus. ptcuHpe', the nostrils. — (2) 

 an artificial orifice: anksap tpe, a gun 

 muzzle; anksa'ivi'"'nixuxioV tpe, a gun's 

 touchhole. — kidutpe, to make a hole for 

 another — mode not specified {ya'kxdu- 

 tpe, afxkulutpe'). iktdutpe', he ... . 

 for thee (you). Vnlddutpe', I . . . . 

 for thee (you). yW^'xMdutpe^ he ... . 

 for me. hiyan'xkMutpi', thou (you) 

 .... for me. — datpe', to bite a hole 

 through, das^' datpe', to bite a hole 

 through an object iifdase i'datpe', 

 ndase' ndatpe'). — natpe, to make a hole 

 through with the foot. (1) ad' natpe', 

 to break a hole through ice, etc., with 

 the foot {ay a' si i'natpe', nka'si i/P^atpe'; 

 pi., asi' na'tpetu', aya'si i'natpetu', 

 nka'si Hi'^'na'tpetu'). (2) naxte' natpe', 

 to make a hole through an object by 

 kicking {i'naxte i'natpe, i^nnaxte li^na- 

 tpe'; pi., naxte' natpetu', i'naxte i'na- 

 tpetu' ■d'nna'xte ■dnna'tpetu'). — ukpe', to 

 make a hole through by pressure 

 {yiikpe', imkukpe') . — hutpe'; Tniko^'ni 

 ko'"'' hutpe', to dig with a hoe {miko'n-'ni 

 ayo^' yutpe', miko''^'rii nkon' ilnkutpe'). 

 maxaivon^ni ko'"'' hutpe', to dig with a 

 spade (maxatvo'"''ni ayo'"-' yutpe', maxa- 

 woi^'ni nkon' ilnkutpe'). dusa hutpe, to 

 tear a hole through, duksasadi hutpe, 

 to cut a hole through with a knife. 

 Unksapikon odi hutpe, to cut a hole 

 through with an ax. u'tilpa, hole 

 (16: 8). ama' tUpe', amai^ tupe', hole 

 in ground (21: 26; 27: 7, 10).— okpe', 

 any artificial opening in the human 

 body, nixuxw' okpe', the places where 

 the ears have been bored for wear- 

 ing earrings, ptdin' ahudi' tpaf^hi"-' 

 okpe', the perforation of the septum of 

 the nose. {Also 28: 124, 171, 176.) 



tsi'pa, one hundred.— fei^'pa sonsa'xehe, 

 "one sitting on one hundred," one 

 hundred and one. tsi'pa no'>^pa'xehe, 

 one hundred and two. tsi'pa o'hi, one 

 hundred and ten. tsi'pa o'hi soi^sa'xehe, 

 "one sitting on one hundred and ten," 

 one hundred and eleven, tsi'pa o'hi 

 nonpa'xelie, "two sitting on one hun- 

 dred and ten," one htmdred and 

 twelve, tsi'pa o'hi dana'xehe, one hun- 

 dred and thirteen, tsi'pa o'hi top>a'xehe, 

 one hundred and fourteen, tsi'pa o'hi 

 ksa'xeJw, one hundred and fifteen. 

 tsi'pa o'hi noi^pa', one hundred and 

 twenty, tsi'pa o'hi noi^pa' so''^sa'xehe, 

 one hundred and twenty-one. tsi'pa 

 o'hi da'ni, one hundred and thirty. 

 tsi'pa o'hi da'ni so'^'Sa'xehe, one hundred 

 and thirty-one. tsi'pa no'^pa' , two hun- 

 dred, tsi'pa no'^pa' so^sa'xehe, two 

 hundred and one. tsi'pa no'^'pa' no^- 

 pa'odehe, two hundred and two. tsi'pa 

 no'npa' o'hi, two hundred and ten. 

 tsi'pa no'fi'pa' o'hi so'^'Sa'xehe, two hun- 

 dred and eleven, tsi'pa nof'pa' o'hi 

 no''>pa'xeh£, two hmidred and twelve. 

 tsi'pa no'f^pa' o'hi no^pa', two hundred 

 and twenty, tsi'pa no^pa' o'hi no'f^pa' 

 so'^sa'xeUe, two hundred and twenty- 

 one, id' pa no'O'pa' o'hi da'ni, two hun- 

 dred and thirty, tsi'pa dani', three 

 hundred, tsi'pa dani' soi^sa'xelie, three 

 hundred and one. tsi'pa dani' no'^'pa'- 

 xehe, three hundred and two. td'pa 

 dani' o'hi, three hundred and ten. 

 tsi'pa dani' o'hi so^sa'xehe, three hun- 

 dred and eleven, tsi'pa dani' o'hi no'"'- 

 pa'xehe, three hundred and twelve. 

 tsi'pa dani' o'hi noi^pa', three hundred 

 and twenty, tsi'pa dani' o'hi no'^'pa' 

 sonsa'x&M, three hundred and twenty- 

 one, td'pa dani' o'hi dani', three hun- 

 dred and thirty, tsi'pa topa', four hun- 

 dred, tsi'pa ksani' or tsipa ksa'"', five 

 hundred, tsi'pa aMixp^', six hundred. 

 tsi'ija nati-'pahudi' , seven hundred. 

 tsi'pa danhudi', eight hundred, tsi'pa 

 tckan^', nine hundred. tsi'piMcya' {td- 

 pa-\-iMcya), "old man hundred," one 

 thousand. tsi'p^Mcya' so'"'Sa'xehe, one 

 thousand and one. td'pintcya' o'hi 

 so'^sa'xeKS, one thousand and eleven. 



tspa^i. — atspa'n^hi, to stick or adhere to 

 an object, atspa^'hi kte' kan, he stuck 



