BOAS] HANDBOOK OF INDIAIST LANGUAGES SIUSLAWAN 591 



Related to tctnt are the particles tcik where, and ted, tcaitcl'tc 



WHERE TO. 



tclk, a local particle denoting rest. It may be used indicatively 

 and in an interrogatory sense. It is best rendered by where. 



tcik s^a^na'ml Jco'tan where is his horse ? 



tcik qnuhu'yun Ai?5c where (ever) he finds a person 94.9, 10 



kv} tcik nowhere 56.11 



tcik ants kldlatu''^ where that fun (is) 88.2 



tcik ants yikti'l'md Iqa^'Hu where that big log (is) 88.17, 18 



tea, tcaltcl'tCf a local particle indicating motion. It is used in 

 an interrogative and indicative significance, and is best rendered by 

 WHERE (to). The form tcaltci'tc may be explained as caused by the 

 double suflBxation of the adverbial suffix -Itc (see § § 90, 94). Such 

 double adding of a suffix occurs in only one other instance; namely, in 

 the case of the nominal suffix -ax (see § 101). 



kumi'titc ted yax nowhere (anything to) see 34.4 

 kumV ntexiln qa^ha'ntc ted ni'ctcis not we two (excl.) far some- 

 where will go 56.2 

 . . . tcdn tE Llvf . . . where this I arrived 66.19 

 tcaltci'tc LO^L nl'etux (I) wonder where he will go 64.20 

 tcaitch'tc qa'tc^ntyax he went somewhere 



§ 1.24z, Numeral Particles 



Here belong the following stems: yd'^'xa^ many (see also § 12), 

 tE'mxut^ tsi'nExma, tsi'mxt half, and k^a'-t how many. The particles 

 serving as fractional numerals invariably follow the noun they define, 

 while the two other numeral particles may either precede or follow it. 



yixa'yun yd'^'xa^ hltc I saw many people 



ts'inxut td'la half a dollar 



hl'tcHc ts%'7iExma ants t!l that bear is half a person (literally [a] 



person [is] his [one] half, that bear) 60.16 

 hltc tsi'nlxt ants t!% half human (is) that bear 60.22 



These forms might also be considered as adjectives. It will be 

 noted that most of them end in the adjectival suffix -t (see § 104). 



§ 125, Conjunctions 



Only three particles were found that may be properly said to have 



the function of our conjunctions. These particles are a'l'du^ a^'sxa, 



and H, 



S§ 124-125 



