544 GRAMMAR OF THE KLAMATH LANGUAGE. 



nanukt'intka, adj. and adv.; abbr. nakantka. 

 ' naiiukenainkshi at everybody's house. 



II ;'i 11 u k t u a every kind of thing ; obj. naiiuktualash etc.; see under tiui. 



p 4 n a n i, d. papj'mani, as long as, to the length of. 



p 1 1 a, d pi'pil, alone, none hut; see tAla. 



t a 1 a, d. tatala, in the sense of alone, none but, may be appended to 

 any pronoun and also to substantives. Being in reality an adverb, it under- 

 goes no inflection, but the noun or pronoun connected with it is inflected. 

 Cf. Dictionary, page 385, under No. 3. The Klamath Lake Indians use 

 more frequently pila, pil, d. pipil, in this function, and with them it also 

 means bare. Cf Dictionary, page 206. Gc'tak is used in the sense of alone 

 ill U7, 1. 2. 



t a n i a n i, d. tatAniani, as large in size, so large. 



t Ji n k, d. tatank, so many, so much; not inflected for case, because it is 

 in fact a particle. Cf. kank. Taiikiii in an adverbial signification, cf. 43, 4 



tankak a few, some, not many; emphatically tankakak. 



t a n n i, d. tatanni, abbr. tan, tatan, so many, so mucJi ; correlative to 

 kiinni. 



t u a, enclit. tua something, some article or object, is inflected in the same 

 manner as when used as an interrogative pronoun. As an indefinite pro- 

 noun, it is used also in a personal sense: somebody, some people; e. g., ka-i 

 tualam shlekish I am controlled by nobody; cf. Note to 192; 8, and the pas- 

 sages in the Dictionaiy, page 415, and Texts, 112, 1. 2. 5. 7. 8. 12. 16. 

 Compounds of tua are : 



ka-itua (1) nothing, (2) nobody ; poss. ka-itu41am etc ; here the two com- 

 ponents may also be found separated by other words : ka-i nalsli 

 1 tuA shutetki ku-idsha let us do nothing wicked, 139, 6 ; kd-i shash 

 tua none of them, 20, 7. 



nanuktua (1) every kind of thing, (2) everything Inflected like tua. 



t u m i many, much, has no distributive form, but a diminutive : tuiniaga 

 few, a little of. The locative case is tumlanta, the instrumental tuiniiintka, 

 tumiintka, the other oblique cases tuma. Before m and some other conso- 

 nants the final -i of tuinl is dropped : tum M(')dokni g;itpa many Modocs 



