V u 1 6 d s li a — V u s hi' n k a ni T i n u a s h . 463 



108, 2., ct". 3. 109, 10.-16.; mi u'nak your son, 141, 8.; unakam'iia Aish- 

 ishash shtilta he informed his son Aishish of it, 94, 8., ff. 96, 8.; vunaka 

 m'na his son, 94, 10.; vuna-unaga is contr. into wanunga, 112, 1. Cf. pd-ip. 



V I'l n a k a g a , u'nakak, d. vu-unakaga little son, a term with double dim. 



ending, 96, 11. 107, 16. 108, 1. 109, 13.-16. 110, 3. 5. 15. Dim. vunak. 

 V II n a 1 d s h a to start on an elk hunt, to hunt elks. Der. vun. Cf. gankanka. 



V u n d k i s h , d. vune-uudkish voracious, ravenous; very hungry. Der. undga. 

 viinep, viinap, wu'nip, li'nep, d. vu-iinep /owr, 33, 6. 44, 8.: vuni'pa shdk- 



tat^atko one-fourth part; te-unepanta v. pe-ula/owrfeew. Cf. p^kalaksh. 



vunepni, wmiepni, linepni, abbr. vunipi, d. vu-undpni (1) adv. num., 

 four times: v. taunep forty, 37, 22.; v. te-unepanta td-unep four hundred, 

 cf 33, 6. 37, 20.; v. waita giiilan Thursday ; unipni waitash during four 

 days, 75, 14.; vuni'pni taunepni yards forty yards atvaij (from the camp), 

 40, 13. (2) adj. num., /oMr; wenepi wewanuish yoMr t^'iycA", 101,4. Quot. 

 under ke. No. 1, (2). 



vunsh, wu'nsh, wo'ns, d. viiwansh, wu-ons (I) dugout canoe; these In- 

 dians possess no other boats but pine-logs hollowed out, round below, 

 and about 20 feet long, 122, 21. 23. 148, 1.: wo'ns i'lktsat they tvill sub- 

 merge their dugouts, 74, 15.; viinshtat ilapka to load into a canoe; vu'nsat 

 tamddsa to fasten on the bow of a canoe, 149, 22., cf. 150, 5.; vii'nshatka 

 gdpka to arrive, approach in a canoe or canoes, 28, 2. Cf s^dna. (2) 

 boat, sailboat, scow or any other water vehicle manufactured by whites: 

 vd'nshatka ska'na to row out in a boat, 78, 7. Cf shneklotchn6tkish. 



V u n s h 4 g a , wunshak, d. vu-anshak little dugout, canoe, boat. Dim. viinsh. 

 Yunshakap t chi, d. vu-ansh4kaptchi, adj., long and hollow-shaped; lit. 



"small-canoe-like". Der. vunshdga. 



V u s h a , vussa, wii'sa, d. vu-usha (1) to fear, to be in terror of; to be terrified 



or scared at, 70, 2. 7. 147, 13.: at vush4 E-uksld'shash now they were afraid 

 of the Lake men, 28, 12.; vu'ssa shti'ldshash the troops took fright, 30, 9. 

 31, 3.; vCi'shuk from fright, 88, lO.; vu'shuk Shiishapamtchash m'ndlsh 

 pin6dshuapksht fearing that Old Grizzly might overtake them, 122, 5. Cf 

 shfnamshta. (2) to be a coward, poltroon; to run away through fright. 



V u s h i' n k a m T i n u a s h , nom. pr. of a locality on Klamath Marsh ; lit. 

 "where a snake was found drowned", 74, 15. From wishink, tinuash. 



