394 GRAMMAR OF THE KLAMATH LANGUAGE. 



3. Nouns, adjectives as well as substantives, derived not from wash 

 dweller, but from verbs in -wa, -ua. Some of these are being used as names 

 for persons. 



gukiwash one who goes up hill. 



hushtewash portrait; in Kl. hushtc'tish. 



skakawash bony, rmv-boned. 



shk'lahiasli upper eyelid ; lit. "the coverer." 



vuipelfwash, species of ^re.9< bird; lit. "the flutterer." 



4. To these add the contracted form of wash (-iish, -osh), of which I 

 gave numerous instances under -osh, q. v. 



-we'la, see -kuela. 



-we'ta, -iieta, verbal suffix occurring in intransitive verbs, and point- 

 ing to motions observed upon straight, long, or elongated articles, as the 

 arms, a swing etc.; the long shape of these is indicated by -ta. 



kudta (for kuwdta) to make signs, to beckon. 



kiweweta to ride upon a swing, Mod. 



ndshakweta to drop doivn, be suspended, as wax, curtains. 



s^inueta to ride on a swing. 



shulakut'ta, shulakuaweta to ride upon a swing. 



-wl, see -ui. 



-wijt, suffix of uncertain origin, occurring in a few verbs only and 

 probably connected with -ui, -wi, q. v. It points to the idea of uniting, 

 gathering. 



galdshawia to come close to, approach. 



skfwia to let the hair hang down. 



skutawia to tie, fasten together; from s;futa. 



wl'za> -wixa, suffix of intransitive and transitive verbs, composed of 

 the locative a-, the locative -i-, and the verbal factitive suffix -ga, -ka. The 

 import of this suffix is that of being within, in^^ide of a recei)tacle or vase, 



