t c li e 1 «-> 1 a — t c li 1 Ji . 435 



of the flicker on dress, on liat, 181; 1. 2. Iiicjintations, 154, 10. 167; 30. 

 1 SO; y. Named onomatopoetically after its note: tcha, tcha. Of. kiliwasli. 



tcliewa, d. tchctclma to float; said, e. g., of the mallard-duck, 170; 68. 

 Der. ewa. Cf. iwa, tchiwa. 



Telle warn Stii' '^Antelope's Trail", nom. in: of a locality near Warner 

 Lake, 29, 10. From tche'-u, stii. 



Telle warn tell "Old Antelope", nom, pr. of a mythic animal mentioned 

 in a mythologic Text, p. 118 sqq., whose young are called wiwalaga; cf 

 wf'hlaga. From tche-u, dmtch. 



t c h g a , tchgiimna. Mod. for ska, sgii'mla Kl., q. v. 



tchi, tchi', tsi, tsi, d. tchitchi (1) so, thus, in this way, ?){), 23. 109, 17. 

 Tills particle is, like na-asht, very generally connected with the verbs 

 of speaking, naming and thinking: tsi sa hun ki so they said, 100, 13.; 

 tchi hunk hii'ksha gi thus they spoke: tsi sa, for tsi sa gi, so they said, 

 22, 2., cf 7.; tchin (for tchi ni or tchi nu) thus I, 22, 9.; tsin at gi so I 

 said, 22, 10.; tclii'n gi so I said, 30, 3.; humasht tchi in this strain, 65, 

 12.; c£ 60, 4. 65, 7.; tsi hii'mkank she spoke thus, 65, 13.; tchi' s(^satk so 

 called, having such a name, 29, 2.; tchihunk, for tchi hunk thus, so, 103, 9. 

 1 04, 3. Cf ke, kie. (2) sometimes used for tche, abbr. of tche'k. Cf 

 111, 15. (3) sometimes abbr. from tchui. 



tchi-, tsi-, tche-. The prefix tch-, ts- occurs in a large number of deriv- 

 atives, especially verbs, all of which refer to water or some other liquid, 

 and the motions observed in liquids, as flowing, dripping, flooding, boil- 

 ing etc These terms mostly begin with tchi-, tsi-, initial tche-, tcha-, 

 tchu- being less frequent. Where. the radical has become obsolete, as in 

 tchekeli, the prefix seems to form a radical syllable. 



t c h i a , tsia, d. tchftchia (I) to remain, stay, dwell, live; to be settled, encamped; 

 to stop, remain at a camping-place, house, village etc. : nAka /mkutat tch. 

 the cinnamon hear lives in the woods: tchiA in order to stay there, 173; 2.; 

 hi'-itak tchi'-uapk here he was going to remain, 95, 6.; kjiila tchl'sh a 

 country to live in, 39, 6. ; spungtitgapele E-ustat tchi'pkshi (for tchipkash=i) 

 hilnk snawii'dsas he brought home (his) wife who then stayed at the Lake, 

 78, 13.; lil-ush guni'gshta maklakshash tchl'pksh (for tchi'pkash) «« Indian 

 living on the opposite shore of Upper Klamath Lalie, 65, 17., c£ washi; shliia 



