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BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



I BULL. 46 



sakki, n., one who overtakes. 

 sakkichi, v. t., to cause to overtake; alia 



yan i n ki a™ sakkichi. 

 [sakkin, n., the guinea fowl (Sixtowns 



dialect).— H. S. H.] 

 sakli, n., a trout; the name of a fish; 



name of a serpent; Ch. Sp. Book, p. 



91. 

 sakti, n., the bank of a stream; a bluff; 



a cliff, Josh. 4: 18. 

 sakti chaha, n., asteep place, Matt. 8: 32; 



a high bank; a steep bluff or bank; a 



precipice, 

 sakti foka, a., cliffy; clifty. 

 sakti humma, n. , red banks; a red bank, 

 sakti ikbi, v. t., to bank; to make a dike, 



levee, or causeway; to imbank. 

 sakti ikbi, n., a bank; a dike, 

 sakti la n fa, n., a furrowed bank; a bluff 



marked with ridges or furrows made 



by water running down the sides; the 



name of the Chickasaw bluff on the 



Mississippi at Memphis. 

 sakti oka pit akinafa, n., a cataract, 

 sakti oka pit akinafa, v. a. L, to fall, as 



w T ater over a bluff or bank, 

 sakti toba, n., a levee; an artificial bank, 

 salakha, n., the liver; the pluck. 

 saltili, n., a psaltery. 

 sam, sam (q. v.), pro., of me; used in the 



negative form of verbs before p, as chik- 



sarnpeso; isuba cJdksampeso, you have 



not seen any horses for me, or you have 



not seen my horses. 

 samahachi, samahachi (q. v.), v. a. i. 



pi., to ring, as a bell or bells; himonna 



isuba nuchi at samahanchi na ha n kloli. 

 samahachi, n., the tinkling of a bell or 



bells; a jingle. 

 samak, n., the sound of a bell; a single 



sound of a bell, 

 samakachi, v. a. i., to ring, 

 samampa, n., the sharp sound of a 



bell. 

 samampa, a., having a sharp sound. 

 samanta, see samanta. 

 san, pro., of me; to me; also I; used 



with neg. verbs, as iksanchukmo; ik- 



sanchumpo, he did not buy of me or 



for me. See san, sam, sam. 

 sanahchi, sanichi, n., a wing; a fin; 



the skirt of a saddle. 

 sanahchi ikbi, v. t., to wing. 

 sanahchi takchi, v. t., to pinion. 



sanali, insanali, n., his adversary, 1 Sam. 

 2: 10; insanalali, 1 Kings 11: 14, 23; 

 insanali, to rebel against, Josh. 1: 18; 

 ilinsanali, to go against himself, Matt. 

 12: 26; sanali, asanali, insanali, itinsanali, 

 itasanali, itimasanali, Matt. 5: 39; 12: 

 25; 14: 24; 2 Sam. 24: 1. 



sa,my; me, Lukel: 18; sachukuh; sapesa, 

 to see me. 



salaha, a., slow; dilatory; heavy; prolix; 

 remiss; slack; tardy; tedious. 



salaha, n., slowness; tardiness. 



salaha, v. n., to be slow; isaminsalaha, 

 Matt. 18: 29. 



salaha, v. a. i., to loiter; to slack. 



salaha, n., a loiterer. 



salahat, adv., slowly; moderately; grad- 

 ually; heavily; leisurely. 



salahachi, v. t., to cause to go slow; to 

 impede; to retard. 



salahat, adv.,slackly. 



salahat anumpuli, v. t., to drawl. 



salahat a n ya, v. a. i., to lag; to loiter; to 

 move slowly; to jog on. 



salahat a n ya, n., a jogger. 



salbash, n., a foot-log; a foot-bridge; a 

 tree lying across a creek. 



salbo, a., hardened, as the skin in the in- 

 side of the hand; hard; salahbo, v. a. 

 i., to be " past feeling," Eph. 4: 19. 



salbo, v. n., to be hard; v. a. i., to become 

 hard. 



salbo, n. , a corn on the foot; the hard skin 

 on the foot or hand of laboring peo- 

 ple; a corn; a callous. 



salbochi, v. t., to harden; to make a cal- 

 lous; to harden the flesh. 



sam, per. pro. I, in neg. verbs, as iksam- 

 iksho, I have none; of me; for me; to 

 me, Matt. 2:8; see sam. 



samahachechi, v. t., to jingle; to cause 

 to ring; to tinkle. 



samahachi, samahachi (q. v.), v. a. i., 

 to jingle; to tinkle; tali at samahachi, 

 talikasa yai samahachi. 



samanta, n., peace. 



samanta, samanta, imp., hush; si- 

 lence; keep still (a Chickasaw word). 



samanta, a., mum; still; peaceful. 



sanali, v. a. i., to go against, Luke 2: 34. 



saso, n., my son; my children, Matt. 

 17:5. 



saso tek, n., my daughter, Matt. 15: 22. 



saso toba, n., my stepson. 



satih, n., my mouth, Matt. 13: 35. 



