3'J2 



BHREAU OF AMERICAN KTHNOLOGY 



[BULLETIN 25 



side — cuntinueil. 



nil line side of: punuk yoiieii . . . imka- 

 liik •Kikomdeu, one on one siiif . . . an- 

 other on the other, Ex. 17, 12. ttcaic- 

 mendakil, 'from the land on the other 

 side'; acdmimck nutesfiem, 'I came over 

 the water', E. W. logkoiniii'u-o/iki']. j 

 See other side, aeetawe, acetane, flilAI, \ 

 on both sides of; t'htdikenag, two-edged, [ 

 sharp on both sides; aeetaue seep, on 

 b(.ith sides of the river. 



sig-ht, lummaxmk, a seeing, sight; vlil. n. 

 from iKiinn, he sees. 



silent, chcqimappH { he remains (jiiiet), lie 

 is silent, he stands still; cheijitiiapnh, be 

 thou quiet, be silent ( ii nti-hequimap, I am 

 silent, C). 



ein, iiiutehuk (evil), nKili-hrttnuik (evil do- 

 ing I. See bad. 



since, uddteuh (iii(teal(. lately, C): viid- 

 teuli DC kesuk(jk, since tliat day. 



sinew, iimfchoJil. iuiiIcIkiIiI, a sinew; pi. 



+ ((.S/). 



sing, niiii(i)liain,<iumhoiii, he sings (songs, 

 etc.); ((»(to/iom(oA% singye; suppos. part. 

 noh anmhoniont, he who sings, he 

 singing; vbl. n. uimmhamdonk, a song. 

 ketcohomom, he sings; nukketcohomom 

 (nukhUlmhumom, C), I sing; ketmho- 

 mcok, sing ye {sun kenauau kukkctcohum- 

 omwcof can you sing? C.) ; vbl. n. ketm- 

 homdonk, a singing; ii. agent, kelmliam- 

 inii'ii-iii, a singer. 



sink, (pilUiuen, he sinks, it sinks, as in 

 water, in mud, etc. : kxihtmnogquanh kod 

 ijidlau iri'oy, the vessels were ready to sink 

 (on the point of sinking) , Luke 5, 7 ; 

 quilaueu ut pisseogquanit, he sinks in 

 the mire, Jer. 38, 6. Cf. quttuhham, he 

 weighs (it). With particle of deroga- 

 tion or disaster, quUauuslinu, qntluh- 

 slwu: quttuhshauog oiinhih qvssiik, they 

 sank to the bottom like a stone, Ex. 

 15, 5. See di|i. 



sip. See sup. 



sister, weetuldii-uli, her brother or sis- 

 ter, weelompan, wetomj)assu, his or her 

 brother or sister. See brother, iree- 

 tukgquoh, wetukhhquoh, her sister; ne- 

 iukkusq, my sister [weticks, a sister, 

 R. W. ) . ummisses, ummmies, his or 

 her sister; ummiasesoh, the sister of 

 (him or her), nummism, my sister, 

 kummmis, thy sister, tniniiissli'.iin (the 



sister — continueil. 

 sister of anj' one), a sister; weesumussoh, 

 hisorheryoungersLster, Judg. 15, 2{wec- 

 summis, a sister, R. AV. ; Muh. n'mace, 

 my elder sister, Ed w. ) . Abn. niUekhsS, 

 ma siieur, ait mulier; nebaenemSm (-8n 

 s. v. parentee), ait vir, Rasles. See 

 younger brother or sister. 



sit, (iji/iii, he sits, jirimarily he abides, 

 remains in a place, is at rest, he is 

 or remains inactive; hence with an. 

 subj. often used to express passive 

 existence, 'he is', as tissu (agit) ex- 

 presses active existence or animate be- 

 ing with potential or implied activity, 

 and uhteau (it has itself) , inanimate pas- 

 sive existence, 'it is'; nuttap, I sit; 

 nidfajipirt, I sit here or there, I am sit- 

 ting; u-utappin, he sits here or there, he 

 is sitting; appuog, they sit; apsh, sit 

 thou; yeu opegk, yen apek, sit ye here, 

 abide in this place; suppos. noh apit, he 

 who. sits {yo dppitch ewo, let him sit 

 here; mat apeit, he is not at home, R. 

 W. ; ne appinneat, to tarry; ajjpu, he sit- 

 teth, C. ) ; vbl. n. appuonk, a seat, num- 

 rnatuppii,, he seats himself, he sits down; 

 nummatapsh, sit down (nun-nummdttap, 

 I sit; nummatidpiinal, to sit, C. ; mdt- 

 tapsh, sit thou down: mdUapsh ySteg, sit 

 by the fire, R. W. ; pish mattapuog, they 

 shall sit, be seated, Ind. Lawsxii). 

 weetappu, he sits down with (him); 

 without object expressed, weelappemo, 

 Luke 22, 55 (welapwduvnuas, 'sit down 

 and talk with us', R. W. ). kMkappu 

 [kishke-appu'], he sits near or by the 

 side of (him), quenappu, he sits on or 

 upon (it), he rests on (it) (vbl. n. quen- 

 appuonk, a chair or stool, C. ). 



skin, mattiili quab [m' adl-uh qucw-apjui, tlfAt 

 which is on the outside or the extreme 

 exterior], the skin of man; wadluhquab, 

 his skin, ii-iiskon, uskon, nskon, a raw 

 hide or undressed skin (of an animal) ; 

 leataskon, his skin (oskdn, a hide, C. ); 

 n, collect, uskunk, skins: slwepsoskunk, 

 (undressed) sheepskins, Heb. 11, .37. 

 From ituske, new, or wskun, it is raw, un- 

 prepared for use, see raw. ohkmn, a 

 skin d ressed or prepared for use as cloth- 

 ing (ac6h, a deerskin worn as clothing, 

 R. W.), adj. ohkamie, made of skins 

 (cf. imkhiiiii, he covers or hides; og- 



