TED
tedlamimkr'zwé,, asthma.
tedmunadoo, I dull it :ttdmunak. obtuse, blunt, worn down.
tedmusugunaogwam, a four- square house; having corners.
ledokumajodum, I assay, value.
Miami, I hum; ledooasz'k, it rumbles.
tedoojz'pkwadoo, I merit it.
Tedumuuaboozwek, Ship Har- bor; a water-worn rock.
tegadoo, I freeze it; tegz'zk, cold, chilly.
legelanti, I kill but few.
tegen? which ?
tegisme, I bathe.
tegogwadoo, I dock it, shorten it; tegog‘waldimk, an abbrevi- ation.
teguneiz, I perspire, sweat, tegunéet, it oozes out, drops down.
tegweg'adoo, I line it double.
tegwegemk, bent double; leg- wcgakuse, a stooped person, a hunchback.
tegwodaba/ctek, a n uncertain line, struck double.
ttgwokjélc, brief, very short ; tegwoksum, I shorten it.
tegwol/euk, a shallow pit.
Tajégoolc, Cape Enrage, a shal- low lace.
teksakaa’e/e, a load, a charge for a gun.
teksuk. the west wind.
lekwitagd, I grind grain.
telée, I am thus, it is my custom.
telaawe, I belong.
telabéa'um, I obey it.
telaboolgegwase, I seem to see it.
TEO
lelaa’egr'z, I act, do.
teldluk, I influence him.
ltlamooé, I respond.
lelamook, like, as; alike; tellt—
mookse, I resemble.
teleak ! indeed !
teleboogaonum, I hold it up ;
teledase, I think, imagine, I
reckon up; teledtia’um, I con-
sider it, count it.
lelenoadfiwegaola, I am an art-
ist, designer.
telése, I speak, articulate.
tel/toast, I dream.
telkumz'kse, I act from habit, am
addicted to it.
teloozi, I tell. address; lelimk,
a saying ; telimmmkéwd. a
soliloquy.
teloaské, I get out timber.
lelowtoogwd, I assign.
telsutum, it sounds so to me;
telsulunumk, a report, rumor.
teltde, I make a noise; telleme, I cry, weep. ,
tellooé, I am responsible.
teltoonkd, I speak like others.
temaloaddoo, I dock it, shorten
it.
temésluktdmi, I clip my hair.
tematwigunat, a hunchback, dwarf.
temz’lkuontdk, I break his wing.
lemtdm, I stop it, renounce it.
temsum, I cut it with a knife.
temugwoligunétc,a crane,heron.
tenolawdluk, I give him a New Year’s present.
téomul, a totem; a mark, repre- senting a bird, fish or animal. Note: All the tribes were divided into clans (originally
teladt'zdéek, we greet each other.
eight), each of which had its