222 BTJEEAU OF AMEEICAlSr ETHNOLOGY [bull. 40 



Examples are: 



^/i;*^la'p'a male, husband 178.7 (cf. t!l^- husband, male) 

 ^'a*^la'p'a woman 25 9, 12; 108.4, 5 (cf. ¥a^^s-o'k\la girl who has 



already had courses) 

 moZo^ola'p'a old woman 26.14, 16; 56.3 (cf. mologo^l old woman 



168.12; 170.10) 

 hoH'hd'^W-p'sJdan orphans (cf. hofha orphan and hoH'hid-i-i'V 



my orphaned children) 

 Zom^/l'la'p'afc.'an. old men 128.11 : 130.1 (cf. lomtH'^ old man 24.11; 



126.19) 

 os*o"la'p'a poor people 



3. -h\ A number of place-names with suffixed -V have been found : 



La'rrihik.' Klamath river 



ShiTik!^ Applegate creek (cf. shin beaver) 



Given-p'unk' village name 114.14 (cf. p'wV rotten 140.21) 



Ha-tlonk' village name 



DaV-fgamlk!^ village name (cf. fga^m elk) 



Gel-yalk' village name 112.13; 114.8 (cf. ijdl pine) 



Somolu^k.' ^ village name 



Dal-danVk' village name (cf . da^n rock) 



4. -a'^iri). Nouns denoting person coming from are formed by 

 adding this sufhx to the place-name, with loss of derivative -k\ 

 Examples are: 



Ha-guodHo!^ person from Ha-gwal, Cow creek 



LamJiV-yaJ^ person from La'mhik', Klamath river 



ShPna,^^ person from Sbink', Applegate creek 



Dal-sa'lsana,^ person from Dal-salsan, Illinois river 



Di^-ldmiyaf^ person from DiMomi 



Gwen-p'u^na,^ person from Gwen-p'unk' 



Dal-daniya,'^ person from Dal-dani^k' 



S'omola/^ person from S'omolu^k' (see footnote) 



Ha-t!d^na/^ person from Ha-t!6nk' 



La-t'gd^wo!^ person from La-t'gati, uplands 192.14 



DaJc'-fgamiya,'^ person from Dak'-t'gamik' 



Ha-flHa,'^ person from Ha-t'il 



Gel-ydHof^ person from Gel-yalk' 



Dak'-tsld'^wana'^ person from dak'-ts la^wa^n, i. e., above the 



lakes ( = Klamath Indian) 

 Da¥-ts Id^^malo!^ 



1 The -u^- of this word is doubtless merely the pitch-accentual peak of the -1-, the -u- resonance of the 

 liquid being due to the preceding -o-. The word is thus to be more correctly written as Somolk' (similarly, 

 wulx ENEMY was often heard as wulu^x), as implied by S'omola'^ one FROii Somolk'. In that event 

 S'omol-is very probably a frequentative in v+l (see § 43, 6) from s'om mountain, and the place-name 

 means very mountainous region. 



§ 87 



