394 KLAMATH -EXGLISH DICTIONARY. 



t a I c h t d d s h a t k o , d. tatatchtadshatko elastic, as india-nibber. 



t a - 11 1 a k t tl m n a , d. tatulaktdmna to swalloio ivhile raising the Jicad : tchf- 

 kass a ambii piimiog t. the bird is drinking ivatcr. 



ta-imep, tii'-unep, d. tati'uiep, tatunep; same as tc'-nnep, q. v. 



ta-iini, d. tatii-uni (1) town, city, settlement of white people: tzalampan- 

 kani t. one-half of the town (2) T;i-uni, name given to several of the 

 larg'er towns in the vicinity of the Klamath reservation, as Ashland and 

 Jacksonville in Oregon, Yreka (prononnced Wariki) in California, and 

 their surroundings. Yreka is referred to in 54, 4. 55, 1. Cf Note to 

 55, 1 and 3. From the English town; -i is the suffix of the inessive case. 



t A w a 1 K h , d. tatualsh young quadruped; a term referring to certain animals 

 only: viinam t. elk one year old. C£ lel^dshi, wf'hlaga. 



tiiwi , d. tAtui, v. trans., to bewitch, to charm; to cast a deadly spell upon, to 

 infect with a long-lasting disease by sorcery, witchcraft, magic artifice, by the 

 "eOT7 eye". The jieople believe that conjurers only have the power to do 

 this at will, and that they cast their spells during festive dances, or when 

 visiting the sick etc. Ha' i kiiiks t4wi-uapk, mu' mish ni nil'-ulakuapk 

 should you, as a conjurer, cast a spell, then I woidd punish you in an exem- 

 plary manner, 59, C; k'lgkd, tawi'sh the bewitched one dies, 62, 3.; tii' tdwipk 

 far away from here he cast the spell upon him (tiiwipk for tdwi-apka), at a 

 distance from others, or unseen by them, 64, 2. 3. Cf 6G, 1. 68, 2. 10. 

 11. Cf kinks, shal;^ita, tdwi. 



tdwiks, pi. tumi t, a plant growing in open places in the Klamath high- 

 lands, producing small yellow flowers standing in a bunch. The stalk 

 is about one foot long and has a white tap-root of the same length, 

 which is eaten raw or roasted. 



tawiksalsha, d. tatuiksalsha to gather the tdwiks-root annually or habitu- 

 ally, 74, 3. Cf. kulalsha, po'ksalsha. 



ta'tak, adv. loc, where, just where; when correlative with gii'tak "so 

 much . . . . as where,^' 73, 3. Der. tdta, ak. 



tii'taktak, adv. loc, just where, right at the spot ivhere: tiitiiktak huk 

 IcAlak mii'sha, ga'tak ubd-ush ktu'shka as far as the infection extends on the 

 body of the relapsed patient, ju.it so large a piece he cuts out of the deer-skin, 

 73, 2. From ta'tak, tak. 



