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BUKEAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



Lbull.46 



sitopa; iksitopo, a., decrepit, Luke 13: 12; 



n., a cripple; iksUopuchi, v. t., to crip- 

 ple, Luke 13: 11. 

 sobonoa, v. n., to swell, as the flesh of 



a person. 

 sokbish, a. down, as a stream or a 



road, 

 sokbish, v. n., to be down, 

 sokbish, n., that end of a stream which 



lies toward the mouth; "nether," 



Josh. 15: 19; ibetup, the other part, 

 sokbish isht ashana, n., the breech of 



a gun. 

 sokbish pila, adv., toward the mouth; 



downstream. 

 sokbish pilla, at or quite to the mouth 



or end of the stream, 

 sokolichi, v. t. sing., to smite; to tap. 

 soku n ha, soko n ha, v. t,, to smite; to tap; 



to rap; to strike with the knuckles, 



Luke 11:9; to knock, Matt. 7:7; Luke 



13: 25, where it is used in the plural 



number. 

 soku n ha, n., a smiting. 

 sukko, v. a. i., to thicken. 

 sukko, pp., thickened; fulled, 

 sukko, n., a diameter, grossness. 

 sukko, a., thick; coarse; dense; gross; 



v. n. and n., thickness; diameter; 



iksukko, thin. 

 sukko, adv., thickly; iksukko, adv., 



thinly. 

 sukkochi, v. t., to thicken; to full, as 



cloth, 

 suko, n., a muscadine. 

 sukolichi, v. t., to tap; seesoku n ha. 

 su n ksowa, v. t., to kiss; to play with 



the lips; to make a whistling noise; 



insunksowa, Luke 7: 38; see inpun S poa. 



sh, and, used as a conjunction; derived 

 from cha and pronounced sh for the 

 sake of euphony, I should think, as cha 

 is used for the other persons when sh 

 is used with the first person; chumpa- 

 lish; 2 Sam. 24: 21; ialish, Matt. 2: 8. 

 It is used as a conjunction with U and 

 Id, lish and kish, ialish, akithanokish. 



sh suffixed to the article pronoun, a, ha, 

 ya, ka, ma, forms the renewed or con- 

 tinued mention art. pro., thus: ash, 

 hash, yash, kash, and chash. 



shabahki, a., oval; long and round. 



shabapa, v. a. i., to stand thick, as grain 

 or corn in a hill. 



shachaha, shachaha, v. a. i., to rustle; 

 to make a noise, as leaves. 



shachaha, adv., course, as shalintak sha- 

 chaha. 



shachahachi, v. t. , to rustle, as dry leaves; 

 liashtqp an shachahachi; see shachahachi. 



shachak, n., a noise made among dry 

 leaves. 



shachakachi, v. a. i., to make a single 

 rustling noise. 



shachala, v. t., to bristle. 



shachia, v. a. i., to bristle, as an angry 

 hog, dog, etc. 



shachuna, n., an onion; a name peculiar 

 to some portions of the Choctaw, as 

 the Sixtowns or Bay Indians. 



shafa, n., that which is shaved; a shav- 

 ing; isht sha n fa, a shave or drawing 

 knife; a drawshave. 



sha n fa,pp., shaved; planed; scraped; cut; 

 Hi at sha n fa, shukha yat sha n fa. 



sha n n\, v. t., to shave; to scrape; to plane; 

 to cut; asha n fi, n., place where shaving 

 is done and the shaving or thin piece 

 shaved off. 



sha n fi, n., one who shaves; a shaver. 



sha n fichechi, v. t., to cause one person 

 to shave another, Judg. 16: 19. 



sha n fit itiaiopitammi, pp., rabbeted. 



sha n flt itiaiopitammichi, v. t., to rab- 

 bet; to shave and lap over. 



shaha, pp., scraped; hoslii.nshi at shaha, 

 the quill is scraped. 



sha n ha, n., a kind of wild goose. 



sha n ha, n., a shell gorget; a gorget made 

 of shell and worn on the neck. 



sha n ha toba, n., an oyster shell. 



shahbi, a., pp., cleared; clear; hina yat 

 shalibi, exposed; open; vacant; void; 

 uncovered, Gen. 9:21; nakedness, Ex. 

 20: 26. 



shahbi, n., openness; vacancy. 



shahbichi, v. t., to clear; hina shahbichi; 

 yaknishahbichi, to clear land; to expose. 



shahbika, shahbeka, n., a clearing; an 

 opening. 



shahsholechi, v. t., anumpa iti n shah- 

 sholechi, to contend in conversation, 

 Gal. 5:20. 



shahsholi, shasholi, v. t. pi., to carry; 

 used with itin prefixed; iti n shaslioli, 

 to exceed each other; to go back- 

 wards and forwards, or unequally; i n - 

 shashonli, pi. oii n shali, Acts 15: 22. 



