246 KLAMATH -ENGLISH DICTION AET. 



nki'l; nkfla, nkllla; see ]<il; kila etc. 



nkii'k, d. n^u'nzak, a black goose not, specified 



nkti'l, nk61, n;^61, d. nkunkal, n%ii'nxn,l grmj tvhite-tailed rahhit: nk61am 



ni'l rahhit-skin. Cf. k4-i, kuikuish. 

 n%dka, nkd-aga young mountain-trout, or a smaller species of this fish. 



Incantation: 177; 34. Dim. nkdsh (2). 

 n % ^ w a , n%a'-ua, d. n%^n%ua; same as k(iwa, q. v. 

 n^i'la, d. n^inp^dla; same as kfia, q. v. 

 n z f t s a , n^itcha, d. n^fn^tcha, v. intr , to dry up. to become exsiccated: 



partic. n^l'tchatko dry, dried up, atrophied. 

 N%ltsd = Tsu'ks, abbr. from N;ii'tsatko=Tsu'ks, nora. pr. Kk of ''Dried- 

 Leg'', a chief of the Snake Indians, 28, 7. 9. Der. n/i'tsa, tchu'ksli. 

 n%f-nllga, d. nxin/ulfga, 97, 1.; same as kiulfga, q. v. 

 n^iita, d. \\%\\.'\\%is, to hum at the hotfom of a pan, kettle, cooking utensil: 



partic. n^utatko («) half charred, almost hurnt up. (b) subst., slags, dross. 



Der. noka. Cf natsagi'ula, nMla. 

 n % u t li g i a , d. n%unxiit;'igia to hum at the bottom of a pan, cooking utensil 

 noka, n6ka, n6%a, d. n6nnka (1) to ripen, to mature; to he ripe for eating, 



147, 14.: nu'kuk when rijK, 147, 9.; kdyndshnn'ka, it is not ripe yet, 14,1. 



(2) to become palatable by boiling, cooJcing, roasting or broiling; to he cooked. 



(3) V. trans., to cook, boil, stetv: partic. nukdtko cooked, prepared, done; nu- 

 ktipkash pdn to eat cooked food; no'ksh tvhen stewed, boiled; woyxxk when 

 done, 148, 14.; niiksht after baking it, 150, 7.; nii'ksht after roasting it, 

 113, 9.; nokshtak (for n6ksht ak) as soon as stewed or done, 113, 2. 



n 6kl a, no'kla, niikala, d. nomikla to roast, broil on hot coals: nukaltauipka 

 tchule'ks he commenced roasting meat, 113, 9. Der. noka. Cf pi'ika. 



nshapka, d. nshdnshapka; same as ndshapka, q. v. 



nshi'i,tclit%i, d. nshAnshatcht^i to form a ivaterfall, cascade; said only of 

 water falling free fiom an elevation, not of rapids in rivers. 



n s h a t c h t X i s h , d. nslianshatcht/ish cascade over a vertical rock; ivater- 

 fall as from a mill-run. 



nshendshkAne, 71, 7.; d. of ndshdkani, q. v. 



Nshkaiikalsh, nom. pr. masc. Kl.; interpreted by "The Coaxer". 



Ntiipa, nom. pr. masc. Mod., interpreted by "Broken Arm". 



ntd-ish, nte'sh, d ntentish (1) bow with arroivs as making up the outfit 



