78 ETHNOGEOGHAPHY OF THE TEWA INDIANS [eth. ann. 29 



KusQTjwimhu^u 'dell partly or wholly .surrouoded by a zigzag of stone' 

 0cusqyiovr) f + 6w'« (1)). 



Kv^Qijwiij f ""Zigzag stone' 'stone zigzag' 0cu, + sqriioiijf 'zigzag'). 

 Applied, for instance, to strata of stone with serratedly eroded 

 edges. These are I'epresented in pottery painting. 



Km^rjf 'hornlike projection of rock' ijcu + sejjf 'horn'). 



Kufu\i ' horizontall}' projecting point of stone' 0cu +fu'u). 



Kutq''''n4P^ ' painted rock ' ' rock painting ^ {ku + to'^j/y ' painting ' + '«'''). 



Kutepa 'stone-wall' used either as a fence, or as part of a building 

 {leu + tepa). 



Kuioia ' rock clili' ' {hu + ioia). 



Kitfa4>(g.i ' rocky peak or pinnacle' {Icu + t'a unexplained + dug,! ' large- 

 ness and pointedness' 'large and pointed '). 



KuwaM 'place where stones are strewn or scattered' {Icu + vxue 'to 

 strew' 'to scatter'). 



^« 'corral' 'fence' surrounding an enclosure, 'fence' 'enclosure'. 



K'abiiu 'roundish place enclosed by a fence or hedge of some sort' 

 Qi a + iiCa [1]). The enclosures made for certain Jicarilla Apache 

 and Navaho dances are called Vahuit. 



K'aje 'fetish' 'shrine', applied to anything in which 'pinq,ijf 'magic 

 power' is believed to reside. 



K'aje 'summer person' ' member of summer phratry' (unexplained). 



Fajeku, J^'ajelcubodl 'sacred stone' 'sacred stones' 'sacred stone-pile' 

 ' shrine' (¥aje + leu + bo^i). Cf. TcuTcaje. 



K'ajete'e 'summer people's estufa' (k'aje 'summer person' + te-'e). 

 Synonyms: 'al-ompije'iniowdtite'e, pajogt.tiiniawaiite'e, and 

 Icunj'fete'e. 



E'aioPi 'gap between fences' 'entrance or exit of a corral' Qc'a + wv-i). 



K'eiviH 'outside corner o a houserow, house, corral, etc' {¥e unex- 

 plained -!-«!*'*). 



K'o 'arm' of body or, used figurativelj', 'branch' ' bough ' of a tree, 

 'arm' of a lake or other body of water, 'inlet' 'bay' 'bight'. 



K'oji 'roof hole' 'door in the roof through which entrance and exit 

 are effected'. In Tewa dwelling rooms the Tcoji have been largel y 

 replaced b}' doors in the walls, but the estufas or kivas still have 

 them. Mythical ZVy'^'are believed to existat lakes; &e&pol-wik'oji. 

 Tewa k'oji has been hispanized as coye, and the word is cur- 

 rent in New Mexican Spanish. Bandelier ^ writes "Ko-ye." 

 Tewa Foji means 'roof hole', not 'inner room'. 



K'q7i4'iwe 'place where mineral or other substance is dug' 'mine' 

 'quarry' (Jcqyf 'to dig' + "'iwe). 



K'qyqe 'at the end' 'end' 'extent' ijcoijj' + g</). 



J^'qV./- ill k'oyffe. 



Maklna 'machine' 'engine' 'sawmill' (<Span. maquina 'machine' 

 'engine'). 



• Final Report, pt. i. p. 262. 1.890. 



