344 GRAMMAR OF THE KLAMATH LANGUAGE. 



ing, running', traveling, rolling, etc.; -kanka is the verbified participle -kank 

 of the verbs in -ka, -ga, q v. 



gankanka to be on a hunt; cf. gdna to go. 



killikanka to speed off; from nki'la to be in a hurry. 



l(')kanka to go astray ; cf lua to drift about. 



ndakalkanka to pick up while walking. 



sha-ulankanka to follow constantly. 



shniulatchganka to glance off while in motion. 



shipalkdnka to go about stinking ; from pilui to smell. 



tilankanka to move onward by rolling oneself. 



vush6kanka to go about tvhile afraid of; cf vusliish terrified. 



-kl, -gi. This is the verb gi used in its various acceptations of to be, 

 exist; to do, perform, and closely connected with an adverb or noun preced- 

 ing it. In most of these words gi could be written as a separate word. 



(1) gi fo be, exist, occurs in: 



ka'gi, kiii'ki to disappear, be absent; from ktl-i not. 

 14ki it is stolen, gone, missing ; from le, ha, gi. 

 lushlushki to feel warm ; from lushlush. 

 p'laiki or p'lai gi to be at the culmination point. 

 sha'tki to be tired, exhausted. 

 stagi to fill, to make full; from sta, adv. 



Perhaps ka'ltgi and ta'pjtgi belong here also. 



(2) gi to do, perform, occurs in : 

 nga'sgi to have the diarrhea; from ngash belly. 

 nkakgi to give birth to ; from nkak top of head. 



It also forms the substantive p'gfshap mother, which I take to have the 

 literal meaning of "generator." 



-ke'dslia, see -kfdsha. 



-kia'llllia, see -amna. 



-ki'dslia, -ke'dsha, or -ggidsha, suffix found only in intransitive verbs 

 and the causatives formed from them. It indicates a special circular motion, 



