kaihlia — kayAta. 113 



90, 6. 95, 2.: s/l'I k. oUer-skin belt; belts were made of the skins of almost 

 every quadruped, 90, 6. (2) loin cloth; breech-clout originally made of skin. 



kailiu , kalliu, d. kakaliu (1) mantle or robe made of rabbit skins or bird 

 skins, especially from duck-scalps; not made at the present time by the 

 M4klaks, but manufactured in great perfection and beauty by the In- 

 dian women of Puget Sound and on the coast north of it: k.-skiitatko 

 clad in a rabbit-skin mantle, 125, 2. {2) fur -skin mat; fur dress: kailiulam 

 skutash, or kallio=skutash, fur-skin blanket or mantle, 125, 3. . 



K a 1 m o m , nom. pr masc. Kl. ; a son of Tselo;tiDS, q. v. Some Indians 

 interpret this name by "Light-Haired". Cf ka-i. 



kd-ishna, d. kaki'shna (1) /o close with a cover or lid. (2) to close, shut 

 up a lodge or house by closing the door-flap, smoke-hole, door, or other 

 issue; to lock a door, 66, 4. 



k a i s h n 6 1 k i s h , d. kakishn6tkish lock, latch, door-latch. 



kaishnula, kaishn61a, d. kaldshniila (1) to open up a cover or lid; to un- 

 cover the iopof the mud- or winter-lodge, 120, 12. 13. 15. 17. (2) to open 

 a door: kitchkdni, kaishnuli! boy, open the door! nu gaishniila g^ka / open 

 the door and go out Der. kd-ishna. 



kaishnulia, d. kakishnulia to uncover, open up, open the door for some- 

 body, 120, 17. 



kafshtish, gdshtish, d. kaki'shtish ( 1 ) door-flap of lodge. (2) hinge door, 

 door of room or house; cover serving as door or entrance, 66, 13.: wdklakam 

 k. wall-gate, corral-gate. 



k a y 4 h i a ; same as kd-iha, q. v. 



kayaktdmpka to begin hunting, pursuing, searching or looking out for, 

 126, 8. Der. kd-iha. 



kdyaktgi, 40, 4.; exhortat. mode of ka-iha, q v. 



kdyaktka, d. kaki'ktka to return from the search, lookout, pursuit or hunt, 

 140, 7. 141, 3 Der. kd-iha 



kdyaktcha, d. kakdyaktcha (1) to go and look out for, to be searching for, 

 108, 4. 5 110, 20. (2) to be engaged in pursuing: mdklaksash k. tJiey pur- 

 sued the Indians, 43, 4. Der. ka-iha. 



kdyaktchna, d. kakayaktchna to pursue to a distance, 30, 11. 



k ay at a, the smallest kind of Klamath dwellings: 183; 18. The two old 

 Thunders, parents of the five Thunders, are supposed to have lived in a 



