BOAS] HANDBOOK OP AMERICAN INDIAN LANGUAGES 793 



awinAniM^c*' then she flayed and cut him up 162.14 (a — dtc^ [§ 29]; 



-A- [§ 21]) 

 TclciwlnAmJiatc^ after she had flayed and cut it up 162.14 (a- 



dropped [§ 12]; Tclci- [§ 16] completion) 



ivtne- filthy. 



wlnesiW she is filthy 292.15 {-si- [§ 20]; -W [§ 28]) 

 See also 320.3 



wlseni' to eat. 



mwlseniw^^r* they shah eat 8.11 {-WAg'' [§ 28]; wl- used because 



the form is intransitive [§ 28]) 

 Kwisen' thou wilt eat 26.7 (H- [§ 28]) 

 awlseniic*' then he ate 240.13 {d—tc' [§ 29]) 

 See also 14.18; 196.16, 20 



yd- to go. 



djsiwdte^ that they went 72.2 (a- unexpected with the sub- 

 junctive, but see my note to § 29; -wdte^ [§ 29]) 

 dysLmiga¥ it went 224.17 {d—¥[l 29]; -miga- [§§ 33, 20; cf. § 28]) 

 dysiwdtc they went 166.5 (for d — wdtc^ [§ 29]) 

 See also 72.3; 176.20; 200.21; 262.2i 



SECONDARY STEMS (§§ 17-20) 

 § 17. Types of Secondary Stems 



These stems are not as numerous as initial stems, but still their 

 number is quite considerable. They never occur alone, but are 

 found usually between an initial member and a formative, or else, 

 but much less often, in conjunction with onl}^ a formative. In a 

 combination like td'wicVnw"' he fell and hurt himself, tdwi- is 

 initial, and denotes pain; while -cin is secondary, and expresses the 

 notion of coining to a state of rest. In the word tcl'mdn^ canoe is a 

 less frequent example of a secondary stem occupying first place. 

 The stem tci or tcini comes from a secondary element indicating 

 movement in water, and the rest of the word is a suffix denoting 

 abstraction, both together referring to the object used for going 

 through water. 



Just as a regular system of arrangement determines the position of 

 initial stems before secondary stems, so the same sort of order places 

 the representatives of one group of secondary stems before those of 

 another group. This peculiar method of arrangement rests largely 



^ From p. 772 to here, addition by T Michelson. 



§17 



