120 



Make an iucliuation of the body forwai'd, moving at the same time 

 both hands forward from the breast, open, with the pahn upward, and 

 gradually loweriug them. {Iroquois I.) "I give you thanks." 



Extend both hands outward, palms turned down, and make a sign 

 exactly similar to the way ladie.s smooth a bed in making it. ( WichiUi I.) 

 Smooth and easy. 



(ilatifi. 



Left hand arched, the thumb and forefinger meeting at their tips, 

 forming a circle, is held in front of the left breast, horizontal back of 

 hand upward, thumb and forefinger toward the body; then the right 

 index is brought up close to the body in front and passed forward from 

 the breast, describing a series of circles to the center of the circle formed 

 by the left hand, but not jjlaced within it. Daylight is included in this. 

 [Balota I.) " From the same rays of light passing through a pane of 

 glass into the house." 



fwliitfon; Parasite.- 

 Italian sign. — Pinch the cheek with the finger. (Butler.) 



Cwo; g'oanny; depart; leave liere. 



The back of the hand stretched out and upward. (Dunbar.) 



Like C'oiiie ( Wied), but begin near rhe face and exteiid the hands 

 with a number of gentle Jerks. ( Wied.) The same remarks apply to 

 this sign as to that for Come. (Matthew.'i.) The right arm is bent 

 and the hand in position (B 1) horizontal is brought to the epigastrium 

 and suddenly arm and hand are extended. The identity of the concep- 

 tion of this (Hu sign and Wied\s is evident. The movement of extension 

 in the latter description "by Jerks' has little relevancy, and maybe 

 reasonably explained by the caprice of the subject. (Boteler.) 



Move both hands edgeways (the palms fronting the breast) toward 

 the left, with a rocking-horse motion. (Bnrfon.) 



Eight hand held toward left shoulder forcnrm across the breast, 

 fingers and thumb extended, palm upward and inward; brought with 

 elbow for a pivot suddenly to the right, (('heyenne I.) 



The right hand is carried to the left side of the body, level of the 

 breast, horizontal, palm outward, thumb below (W 1), extended fingers 

 pointing toward the left; carry the arm out to full extent in front of 

 body and to the right. This is emphatic. "Dismissing the person." 

 Many Indians make the sign for CttO, Go away, by using the index 

 ,held upward, the rest of the fingers being (closed and carrying from left 

 to right or directly out in front of body, but this is not near so emphatic 

 as the above. CwO, in the sense of CnOiie, Departed, would bede- 



