yahi — y4makni. 101 



y 4 y a k i a to he afraid, to he in fear of: kd-i liiela yayakiuk / was too terri- 

 fied (at the eagles) to Mil them, 1 00, 4. 



y ii k a , ya'ka ; see y (^ka. 



y d k i , d. ydyaki, yd-iki (a short in Kl.) conical basket or receptacle worn on 

 back for collecting roots, tubers, seeds, and seed-grasses, and ir.ade from 

 branches of the young willow: y. shkdtkgla to carry a hasket on hack, 109, 

 1.; y. shl^yamna to string a basket around oneself, 10', 11.; y. shtagi to fill 

 the basket, seed-basket, 118, 4. 7.; ydkiamtch old, broken or used wp basket. 

 01 146, 4. 147, 15. 148, 6. Der. ydsh. 



ydla, ydlatko, ydlha; see 11a. 



ydliala to become clear, transparent, pure, unclouded: dmpu a yAlialtk gi 

 the water is clear, limpid. 



Ydlialant, nom. pr. of a camping ground on Williamson River: ^^ At the 

 Crystal- Water". Locat. of ydliali. 



ydliali d. yaydliali clean, pure, limpid, transparent; said of water. 



y A 1 k a m , yal^am, d. yaydlpjam had weather, storm, tempest, atmospheric dis- 

 turbance. Der. i-dl^a, d. of ^l^a (to prostrate). 



ydl^amala, d yaydl^amala to produce a storm or rainy iceather. Some 

 Oregonian Indians believe this can be effected by rolling rocks downhill. 



Ydmak, nom. pr. of Oregon, 44, 1(K; abbr. from Ydmakni; stands for Yd- 

 mat, Ydmatala, or Yamaki'sham kailatat. Mod. Cf Note to 44, 6. 



y d m a k i s h , same as yamakni, to which it furnishes the oblique cases. 

 Na'wapksh yamakstan to the north side of Goose Lake, 31, 7.; see Note. 



Ydmakisham Yaina, nom. pr. of Cascade Range; lit. "mountains of 

 the Northerners". Cf ydmakni. 



ydmakni, ydmatkni, ydmatni; obj yamakishash (1) adj., coming from 

 the North, horn in a northern land; inhabiting the country north of the Klamath 

 Lake highlands: y. gdtpa came from the north, 131,5 (2) subst., Ydmakni 

 Northerner ; generic name for all Indians living north and northwest of the 

 Klamath Lakes and Modocs, 192; 1.: Yamaki'shamkshi in the country of 

 the Northerners, U;9 ; 2 Special tribes are sometimes designated by this 

 name; the Nez-Perc^s; the Warm Spring Indians in 13, 16. 17, 1. (cf 18, 

 2. and 78, 10.), the scouts recrviited among this tribe in the Modoc war, 

 who were largely mixed with Wasco Indians: 43, 5. (Note!) 6. 15. 21. 



