562 GRAMMAK OF TllH KLAMATH LANGUAGE. 



tula heinkank' i ! tell the truth ! 



tatala licmkank' i! tell the truth in every instance! 



ka-i pelak lienKix' i! do not speak fast! (when you meet me once). 



ka-i pap'lak henit'x' i! do not speak fast! (every time you meet me, or 



each time you converse). 

 ma'ntchak gitk after a ivhile. 

 mamantchak gitk after a while (severally speaking). 



LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL ADVERBS. 



The following list of the more frequently occurring adverbs will ex- 

 hibit to the best advantage the modes of adverbial derivation. Some of 

 them are used in very different acceptations. The numerals have branched 

 out into two adverbial series, one in -ash, the other in -ni: ndanash to or at 

 a third place, and ndani three times; cf pages 630 to 532. 



Temporal adverbs have all evolved from locative adverbs, and hence 

 often retain both significations; all the so-called "seasons" of the Indian year 

 ending in -e'mi, -a' mi, as mehiashii/mi in the trout season, may be joined to 

 the list below. Many of the adverbs of modality arc formed by iterative 

 reduplication, of which only a few examples are given below; other adverbs 

 possess a correlative belonging to the same subdivision. Cf page 262, and 

 suffix -li, pages 352, 515-517. 



Adverbs of quantiti/ and degree. 



ga'tak, kt^tak, Mod. kanktak so much, enour/h. 



ka, d. kak, so, thus; derived from the relative pronominal radix, ana 



forming ga-asht, ka-a, kanktak, ka taniani, etc 

 ka-a, ka-a, ka, ga much, larfjely, very. 

 k^tcha, gii'dsa, kedsa a little, a trifle, not much; ketsagak very little 



only. 

 mil, d. mu'm, much, largely; the adverb of miini great. 

 til'm much, a great deal; the adverb of tumi, many. 

 tchiltchui a great deal; turn tchatchui too much. 

 wiga, wikA not much, a little. 



