Ugly, disgusting. lamámk inmí tɨmná ‘my ugly heart’.
1,422 term are adjectives
lámt
Blue; gray horse. lámt iwá túx̣ɨn ‘the sky is blue’; watx̣ɨ́n pawá ƛ̓áax̣ʷ lamtlámt ‘are they all blue?’; lamtlámt ‘blue things’; x̣máaš latít lámt ‘blue camas flower’; lámt wáłx̣ʷas waitk̓ásasa ‘western skink, Eumeces skiltonianus‘; lámt pɨšx̣ú ‘green rabbit brush, Chrysothamnus viscidiflorus‘. [Y also lɨ́mt, lúmt; NP /yoosyóos/
laqáylaqayi
Crossed. páłka pípšin laqáylaqayi ‘skull and cross-bones’.
láqayx̣iyi
Shining, bright. láqayx̣iyi wáwnakʷšaš ‘bright body’ (said of peeled roots or at a funeral).
láq̓ʷšq̓ʷšiyi
Scorched. šapálaq̓ʷšq̓ʷšiyi ‘toasted’. [NP /waq̓´sasniˀns/.]
lát̓ɨlki
Smoked. sɨ́may lát̓ɨlki ‘smoked whitefish’.
lawláwi
With fur, furry. lawláwimaš wá tpɨ́š ‘you have a furry face’; lawláwi wínš ‘hairy man, sasquatch’. [NE lawlawí; NP tehyíin /teheyiins/.]
láx̣yawiyi
Dried, emaciated, wasted physically. [NP /ˀlaqy̓áwiˀns/.]
láx̣ʷayx̣
Hot. Also láx̣ʷayx̣t. láx̣ʷayx̣ iwá pšwá x̣ʷyáytšpa ‘the rocks are hot in the sweathouse’; láx̣ʷayx̣ čúuš ‘hot water’.
láx̣ʷayx̣i
Heated, hot. iwɨ́npa pšwá ku itamáluuna láx̣ʷayx̣iyaw čúušyaw ‘he got the rock and put it in the heated water’.
láx̣ʷayx̣t
Hot; heat, fever. láx̣ʷayx̣t iwá čúuš ‘the water is warm’; láx̣ʷayx̣t iwá lálx̣ ‘the coffee is hot’; láx̣ʷayx̣t čúuš ‘hot water’; láx̣ʷayx̣t waanáytt ‘hot springs’; iwá ataaláx̣ʷayx̣t ‘it’s very hot’; láx̣ʷayx̣t pšwá ‘hot rocks’. [NW also láx̣ʷiix̣t; NP /luˀuq̓ic/.]
-lí
Past participle. With nouns meaning ‘having’. c̓x̣uuylí ‘tepee’; mɨc̓uux̣lí ‘pot, tea pot’; mɨx̣šlí ‘wolf lichen’; q̓apq̓aplí ‘hard soled shoe’; q̓ɨšpalí ‘buzzard’; q̓ɨx̣lí ‘tule mat’; tamawlalí ‘horse trappings’; tawtawlí ‘tin can’; tuˀuklí ‘stink bug’; x̣ʷšx̣ʷšlí ‘stretchy material’. See -i.
Damp
mɨtíit ~ mɨtɨ́t ‘moist’.
Dampened
mɨtɨ́tni.
Dangerous
iyíya ‘hazardous, reckless’.
Dark
sáac̓at ‘very dark’ (as night); čmáakʷ ‘sooty, very black’ (as of a horse).
Dazed
šɨnɨnɨ́pni ‘dizzy’.
lɨlúyni
Contaminated. [NP /llúyiˀns/.]
Dead
ƛ̓iyáwiyi; tanánƛ̓iyáwiyi ‘dead person’; ƛ̓iyawiyášani ‘dead with effect on others’.
Deaf
t̓láak ‘hard of hearing’.