340 GRAMMAR OF THE KLAMATH LANGUAGE. 



pepuf'idshnish spendthrift ; from put'dslia to throw away. 

 shc'shatuish store-keeper ; from shdshatui to sell. 

 »\\Q^\\i6\\d&h. prostitute ; from sliet61;{a to consort. 

 shishi'ikish ^^/*fcr, bully; fi'om shiuka to heat, ivhiji. 



Besides these are several terms of zoology in ■ isli, the roots of which 

 have become obsolete, viz: kd-ish rattlesnake, hishtish sucker fish, tchashish 

 skunk, tchc'lish hedf/ehog, and others., 



4. A few abstract nouns end in -ish: liishlushlish warmth, from lusliU'ishli 

 warm. 



-ita, see -ta. 



-i'ta, accented verbal suffix occurring chiefly in intransitive verbs, and 

 indicating location away from or a motion toward the outside. That func- 

 tion of its component -ta which indicates distance is perceptible in it. 



gunfta to r/o or he beyond, on the other side of. 



kftita to hurst, explode. 



kshfta to escape by running etc. (Mod.). 



nitfta to he open, sore, as from a wound. 



shnekshita to save, deliver out of 



tgatfta, tgutita to stand outdoors. 



-ya, see -Aya, -ia, -fa. 



-ye'g'a, see -dga. 



-ye'lia, see -ena. 



-yiia. The verbs in -yua are derived from transitive verbs in -ka, 

 -ga (-uka), and are used when the action refers to a few objects only. In 

 the Dictionary a reciprocal function was given to some of tlieni, Init this 

 appears to be secondary to that of a few. 



iduyua to give kicks to a few ; from idi'ika to kick. 



ko-uyua to bite a few, or each other. 



ktiiyua to hit a few, to hit each other ; from ktiika to strike. 



stuyua to stab a few ; froni sti'ika to stab. 



udiiyua to whip a few or each other; from viuluka to Ijraf 



