366 GKAMMAll OF THE KLAMATH LANGUAGE. 



hashpaxpfili to rub oneself dry ; from spaha. 



kilibli to retire to the den; from kflhi to enter. 



kukpeli to put on the kuks-goivn, as done ever)' morning. 



na'hlipgli to string the how, even when not strung before. 



iidpeli to turn over, upside down. 



waltakp6li to debate, to talk over and over. 



-pka. The verbs in -pka preceded by a consonant, a few verbs in 

 -fpka, and those ending in -opka, -upka (o and u short) when i, o, u belong 

 to the stem of the word, are : 



(1) Iterative verbs, and have the penuUimate accented. They are 

 formed from transitive as well as from intransitive verbs, and some of their 

 lumiber are usitatives, indicating habitual practice. A compound suffix 

 -ampka is made from verbs in -ana, -ana; -ankpka is made from verbs in 

 -anka; another, -alpha, q. v , from verbs in -ala, and here the accent some- 

 times recedes further. The suffixes -alpha, -j'lpka, -ipka, -opka, -uapka 

 were spoken of separately. 



ktupka to strike repeatedly ivith clasped hand. 



leklekpka to whisper. 



makpka to encamp many nights away from home. 



sha-amokpka to call somebody of one^s kin. 



shahualpka to send the echo hack, to form echo. 



shji'tupka to consort tvith, cohabit. 



shuktupka to push rej)eatedhi. 



vudupka, udiipka to strike repeatedly with a stick etc. 



watchpka to tvin all the stakes. 



(2) Other verbs in -pka, with consonant preceding, point to distance, 

 and belong to the class of -apka, -ipka, q. v. For instance: skulpka, 

 shuilpka, telittinkpka, telshakpka, tupka. 



-p'l, -p^li, see p6li. 



-p'lltl, -pena, -pna, suffix appended to verbs of motion and marking 

 contact, approach or going past, passing beyond some object ; is composed 



