LIST OP SUFFIXES. 343 



Dictionary, p. 33); hence in the words below it has the sense of moving, 

 trnirUng, or going around an object or objects, and occurs in transitive and 

 intransitive verbs. 



ginkakiamna (1) to encircle as a hollow body ; (2) postp. all around. 



i-ukakiiimna, adv. and postp., around, about, in the vicinity. 



ipekakianina to dig ivhile going all around. 



kuakikakiamna to go around here and there while eating, munching. 



ntultakakiamna to flow around. 



shalkakifimna to go or climh around an object. 



shatashkakiamna to pass around while touching, grasping. 



-kll'kua, verbal suffix appended to verbs of motion. It indicates a 

 movement or swaying back and forth, to and fro, and is nothing else but 

 the verb gakua, kakua to cross over, appended in suffix form to verbal bases. 



nutokakua to swing to and fro, referring to the heavy disk on the pen- 

 dulum. 



stilkakua to send somebody forth and hack, e. g., as messenger; cf stil- 

 kakuish, Dictionary. 



vut6kakua to swing to and fro, referring to the long shape of a pendu- 

 lum, stick etc. 



-kaili, -gani is a terminal appended to some adjectives, referring to 

 an indefinite, uncounted number of objects, and differing from -kni. -kani 

 is not always a suffix, but sometimes it is the adjectival suffix -ni appended 

 to bases ending in -ka; therefore the adjectives in -kani ai'e found variously 

 accented. The adjective yanakani, e. g., some one below, forms a plural 

 vanakanini. Others belonging here are kitchkani (from kitchka), ndshe- 

 kani, txalampunkani, tumikaui, etc., and some of the numerals. Cf Dic- 

 tionary, pp. 116. 117. 



-kiVllka, or -gdnka is a formative suffix found only in intransitive 

 verbs or transitive objectless verbs. It points to an act or status undergone 

 while walking or moving, and thus forms a class of ainhulatlve verbs implying 

 a single act, or the repetition, continuance, and steady succession of acts per- 

 formed while in motion. These verbs describe the various modes of walk- 



