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BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



I BULL. 46 



wak ushi, n., a calf. 



wak ushi cheli, v. t., to calve. 



wak ushi hakshup, n., a calfskin. 



wak ushi nakni, n. , a bull calf. 



wak ushi nipi, n., veal. 



wak yushkoboli, n.,acow withouthorns. 



wakalali, pi., waHa, sing., v. a. i., to 

 crack. 



wakalali, pp., cracked. 



wakalali, n., cracks; crevices; interstices. 



wakalalichi, v. t., to cause to crack. 



wakama, v. a. i., to unfurl; to spread 

 out; to open. 



wakama, pp., opened; unfurled; holisso 

 hat wakama, shaphat wakama, itipatalh- 

 po at wakama, the floor is raised up en- 

 tire so that one can look under it. 



wakamoa, v. a. i. pi., to unfurl. 



wakamoa, pp. pi., opened; unfurled. 



wakamoli, v. t., to unfurl; to spread 

 out; to open. 



wakaya, n., a start. 



wakaya, n., a starter. 



wakaya, v. a. i., to rise from a seat, Matt. 

 9: 9; Luke 5: 28; to arise (from a sick 

 bed), Matt. 8: 15; to get up; to rise up; 

 to start; to start off on a journey, Josh. 

 1:2; 8:1; o^wakayat hikia, to stand over, 

 Luke 4: 39; nitak nantasho ishwakayar 

 tuko n , on what day did you start? 



wakayachi, v. t., to cause to get up; 

 to cause to start; to start; to make him 

 rise up, 2 Kings 9: 2. 



wakayoha, v. a. i. pi., to rise up from 

 a seat. 



wakayohachi, v. t., to raise them up. 



wakammi, v. t., to open, Luke 4: 17; 

 Matt. 17: 27; holisso han wakammi, to 

 open the book; nishkin wakammi; itomhi 

 wakammi; ihcakamo, a., unopened. 



wakcha, a., forked; having two prongs 

 or limbs straddled apart, as the two 

 legs in one end of a bench. 



wakcha, v. a. i., to straddle; o^wakcha, 

 v. t., to straddle on. 



wakcha, v. n., to be forked; o n wakcha, 

 straddled over. 



wakchala, v. a. i., to straddle. 



wakchalali, v. a. i., to straddle. 



wakchalalichi, v. t., to cause to straddle. 



wakchalalit itonla, v. a. i., to sprawl. 



wakchalachi, v. t., to make him strad- 

 dle. 



wakchalashli, a., forked; straddled. 



wakchalashli, v. n., to be forked or 

 straddled. 



wakchalashlichi, v. t., to cause to strad- 

 dle. 



wakchali, n., a disease like the venereal 

 disease. 



wakchat hikia, v. a. i., to stand straddle. 



wakchat nowa, v. a. i., to straddle; to 

 straddle and walk. 



wakeli, v. t., to lift up; to raise it up; 

 iti an wakeli, to lift up a log. 



wakkalih, v. a. L, to be low or just 

 heard, as the human voice. 



wakla, v. a. i. sing., to crack open; 

 wakalali, pi. 



wakla, pp., cracked open. 



wakla, n., a crack; a crevice; an inter- 

 stice; abolia wakla; iti patalhpo wakla; 

 wakaloha, pi. 



waklali, n., a fissure. 



waklachi, v. t., to cause to crack. 



wakoha, v. a. i., to open. 



wakoha, pp., opened. 



wakoli, v. t., to open. 



wakolichi, v. t., to cause to open; to 

 lift them up; to raise them up, i. e., 

 anything flat; aboha isht liolmo wako- 

 lichi, lift up the shingle on a roof. 



wakshish, v. a. i., to stub; iyi wakshish, 

 to stub the toe. — J. E. 



walakshi, n., a dumpling; a Choctaw 

 dumpling, made thus: cakes of corn 

 meal are boiled in water gruel, with a 

 mixture of dried peaches, and eaten in 

 a bowl. 



walanto, v. a. i., to be curdled, like milk; 

 see wqlahachi. 



walasha, a., tender or soft. 



walasha, v. n., to be tender or soft. 



walasha, pp., soaked till suppled; wak 

 hakshup at ivalasha. 



walabli, walapli, v. a. i., to go over; 

 o n walapli, 1 Sam. 2: 1. 



wali, v. t., to hold out to view; to hand 

 toothers; nushkobo a n i n wall, to beckon; 

 tali holisso a« i^wali, to offer him 

 money; pqska yaP i^wali, to hand them 

 the bread. 



waloa, v. i., to grow, like a plant or a 

 person; walwoki, pi. 



walo n chi, a., juicy; soft; applied to the 

 part of pine-tree ball which squirrels 

 eat. 



waloha, a., tender; soft. 



