418 KLAMATH -ENGLISH DICTIONAEY. 



tii'ksh, 80, 5.; same as taks, q. v. Cf. tak 



t uk t ukuasli, d. tutaktukiuish j^s/t-/iaM;A;, a bird of the osprey family: 

 I'undion carolinenalii. Incantations, 162; 3. 169; 60. Onomatop 



tukiia, d. tut'kua (1) to go toward the water; to travel in the direction of a 

 lake, bay, river. (2) Ti'ikua, Tokiia, iioiii pr. of a campinjj and landin<^ 

 pkice on Upper Klamath Lake, eastern sliore, at the nioutli of the AVil- 

 liamson River, 142; 5. Cf. gewa, huwa, tiniia. 



t \\ k n a g a , d. tutkuaga little stream, rivulet, brook. Cf. tiikua. 



t u k i ;'i g a , d. tutakiaga little horn, antler, fang, feeler etc. Dim. toke, q. v. 



t u 1 - ; words not found here to be looked for under ntul-, ntun-. 



t u 1 a , tulA, t61a, ])rep. and postp., with, in eompany of on the side of; along 

 tvith, together tvith; also; connected with the obj. case: mish t., hishuak- 

 shash t. with you, tvith a man; kA-i nalash t. without us; nil'sh t. gc'n! go 

 with me! hu p'na t'shisha t. tchia she lived with her father, 54, 3.; Shke- 

 laksli t. aided by Shelag, 66, 5.; mu'nkash tiilak (for tula ak) only with the 

 mole, 104, 1. The use oft. as a preposition is rather exceptional: tul' ish 

 hi my company; t. hak (for hunk) ivith him or her; Canby tula shushu- 

 tanki'shash gcna Gen. Canby went with the Peace Commissioners, 38, 4. 5. 

 T. stands without any complement in: tula shuenksh to hill at the same 

 time and spot, bb, 3.; shash them is suppressed in 34, 18. Cf 19, 7. 37, 

 4. 18. 90, 12. 137, 2. Cf tulha. 



t li 1 a 1 u i , tolalui, d. tut'lalui a sort of tissue, cover or mantle made of swamp- 

 grasses. Cf. tol^ash. 



tvilaluptchi, d. tut'laluptchi light-green; lit. "colored like a tiilalui- 

 mantle". From tulalui, -ptchi 



t u 1 e , tuli, generic term for bulrush, reed, scirpus, swamp-grass. From the 

 Aztec tolin; cf. Molina, Aztec Diet. : jMwda {Cyperus) 6 espadana {reed- 

 mace: Typha latifolia): atolin, itztolin, tolli, tulli. This term has not 

 passed into Chin. J., but is in daily use among the white population of 

 the Pacific Coast. The Kl. generic tei'ms for tule are kshii'u, ma-i. 



tulha, tula, d. tutalha, tutala to club together, to be in company; to form a 



swarm, crowd, school or bevy; said, e. g., of l)irds, fish. Cf. t61;iash, tuli. 



tulhfpgli, tulhfbele, d. tutlfpele to shove or join one part into another; 



said, e. g., of arrows, no pitch being put over the joint. Cf shullu'peli. 



