MICHELSON J 
pe's(e)- listen, listen to (-taw- -t- 
instr.). 70.20, 72.38, 92.30, 304.36, 
308.8, 312.8, 324.16, 396.33, 556.2. 
pe'‘se- wear, put on (-‘k- instr.; Jones 
pi'se-). 168.26, 224.4, 428.39-40, 
436.17, 478.32, 580.41. 
pena‘a- comb, 64.10. 
pena‘a‘kwa-, pena‘a‘kwaé- comb the 
hair; with -w- instr. when transi- 
tive; obviously a compound in origin; 
see pena‘da- and -‘kwa-; note, how- 
ever, that the terminal 4, 4 does not 
behave as the final 4 of--kwi-. 330.3, 
330.8, 332.26. 
penawi- be summer. 
550.24. 
penagi- peel (-n- -‘c- instrumentals 
with inanimate objects; the form 
penagi- is restored conjecturally but 
with certainty; penage- has to ap- 
pear before these instrumentals ow- 
ing to phonetic law. 556.17. 
pene‘ck(i)- (with -n- [rarely] -n- instr.) 
rip out, untie. 302.5, 328.42. 
peninawi- take off clothing; obviously 
a compound in origin; see pa‘kinawi-. 
202.13, 332.27, 508.29, 508.30. 
peno- go home, depart, ‘‘go some”’ in 
the slang sense, go at high speed; 
with -‘- instr., dismiss, release. 
46.30, 48.15, 52.40, 332.24, 384.3, 
388.8, 396.8, 412.11, 562.25. 
peno‘tei- far off (with the copula -a-); 
a form pendt- is unknown to me. 
576.6, 576.19. 
pepe'ckwi- peel. 576.40—-41. 
pep6- be winter. 300.16, 304.4, 314.39, 
380.3, 444.14, 506.12, 506.33, 550.32, 
556.22. 
peponwi- be so many winters (i. e. 
years) old; related in some way to 
pepo-. 296.2, 296.12, 408.14, 550.2. 
pe'pi- (probably; perhaps pe‘pe-) cut, 
peck; -‘ew- instr.; not used with -'c-. 
306.39, 306.40. 
pemi- along, during, begin; with the 
instrumentals -‘kaw-  -'k- -n- -n- 
{meaning take care of]; the evi- 
dence of Cree, Ojibwa, and Algonkin 
indicates that postverbal -t- -4tci- 
go with pemi-; -¢tci- goes rarely with 
pemi- in Fox. 46.20 (twice), 46.30, 
48.1, 48.17, 58.16, 58.20, 160.1, 
160.27, 168.3, 296.22-23, 298.30, 
3599°—25t——42 
424.25, 424.34, 
LIST OF STEMS 
649 
298.31, 308.19, 382.3, 382.26, 384.13, 
386.9, 406.15, 434.21, 466.10, 506.38, 
510.4, 550.20, 554.11, 554.29. 
pemw- shoot, shoot at (employs no 
instrumental with an animate ob- 
ject; -t- with an inanimate object; 
similarly Cree, and possibly both 
Ojibwa and Algonkin; pipemw- when 
reduplicated). 62.24, 382.27, 562.3, 
564.27, 566.6, 574.16, 574.29. 
-pi- taste. 124.12, 124.15, 524.26. 
-pi- sit; not certain whether some cases 
belong here or are contractions of 
Api-; originally probably an ex- 
tended form of a contraction of 
Api-. 200.24, 436.26, 486.27, 508.43, 
550.1, 582.27, 600.9. 
-pi- tie (-n- -t6- instr.); not a true 
stem but due to contraction; see 
-api- tie. 
-pi'i- a rhetorical form of -pi-, sit. 
552.2. 
-pigi- rib. 172.17, 562.35. 
pigaiwi- very. 172.43. 
pigi- turbid. 54.12, 54.26, 54.40, 60.3. 
pigi- play cards. 384.14. 
pigi‘ck- be discouraged. 
pigw- brush, thicket; 
302.39. 
pi‘ci- renew; with -‘t6- instr. 210.28. 
pi‘ck- be tired of (combined with -iine-). 
146.23-24, 174.2. 
pi‘cki- soft; perhaps pi‘ck- belongs here. 
246.9. 
piti- entrance, enter (-gaé- auxiliary; 
when inanimate -migat- combines 
with -gi-); visit (-gaw- instr.); com- 
bined with obscure -ga-, bring inside, 
initiate (-n- -t0-instr.; similarly Ojib- 
wa and Algonkin; -n- [e] before -ti-) ; 
bury (-‘w-instr.; retained before -ti-) ; 
a doublet pittci- occurs under un- 
known conditions; it can not be ex- 
plained as being due to a fusion with 
a following i of another stem; Cree, 
Ojibwa, and Algonkin have corre- 
sponding doublets, and all seem to 
agree with Fox in usage. 48.18, 
50.24, 68.43, 76.27, 132.18, 178.19 
(twice), 200.32 (twice), 218.18, 
320.27, 326.28, 328.34, 330.37, 388.25, 
390.11, 394.23, 394.43, 426.10, 454.26, 
514.29, 558.7, 594.20. 
pi'tawi- extra, additional. 
178.6. 
-Aa- copula. 
154.40. 
