sapacanpáwas ‘bridle, horse bit; pliers, pincers, tongs’.
4,794 terms are nouns
Pine
táp̓aš ‘ponderosa pine, Pinus ponderosa‘ (also, ‘generic pine’ or ‘generic tree’); pak̓inákaas ‘western white pine, P. monticola‘; kalámkalam ~ qalámqalam ~ tap̓áštap̓aš ~ tap̓ašwáakuł ‘lodgepole pine, P. contorta‘; nɨnɨ́kaaš ‘white pine, P. albicaulis; tree or area that is a source for pine nuts, pinecone’; nɨnɨ́k ‘pine nut’; łɨpłɨ́p ‘pine needles’; tap̓áytap̓ay ‘pine seedlings (such as for replanting)’.
Pinecone
palalík ‘conifer cone’.
Pinedrops
tutanikpamá ‘Pterospora andromedea‘.
Pink
mác̓ya ~ mac̓yá ‘humpback, calico, or pink salmon, Oncorhynchus gorbuscha‘.
Pipe
čalámat ‘pipe, ceremonial pipe’.
Pipsissewa
tanux̣itpamá ‘umbellate wintergreen, Chimaphila umbellata‘.
Pit
wɨlčí ‘pit house, dug-out house, winter cache one can walk into’; atamkí ‘cache pit, underground storage’; támaš ‘barbecue pit’; támayčt ‘barbecue pit, underground barbecue’; tamaycáwas ‘barbecue pit’; wɨlčítaš ‘abandoned pit house’.
Pitch
ɨšx̣í ‘pine pitch’; tamáˀuyit ‘first pitch in baseball, lead off in stick game’.
Pitcher
yax̣tat̓áwas ‘water pitcher’.
Pitchfork
pak̓ʷaakáwas ‘fork, table fork, pitchfork’.
tqúni
Dug out, hole, cave. tqúni iwá tiičámpa ‘there is a hole in the ground’; tqúni áwa táatpas ‘he has a hole in his shirt’; ix̣nɨ́mna tqúni šíki ‘the badger dug a hole’; šikinmí áwa tqúni ‘the badger has a hole’; pátatpa tqúni ‘hole in a tree’; tnán tqúni ‘cave’; tqútquni ‘perforated’. [NP p̓íłin /p̓´łnt/.]
tq̓íx̣t
Want, desire, claim. k̓ʷáyš wá inmí tq̓íx̣t ‘that is my desire’; winšmí tq̓íx̣t ‘the man’s claim’. [NP /wéwluqt/.]
tq̓nút
Frost, dampness, iciness. Also sometimes tq̓núkt. [WS & Y tq̓núkt; NP /ˀsqepit/.]
tq̓úx̣t
Sore. wásɨmtq̓ʷx̣t ‘saddle sore (of a horse)’.
tq̓úx̣tq̓ux̣t
Sores.
Place
tiičám ‘land, ground, earth, property’; aláašu ‘place furthest from the door of a tepee or lodge’; aláy ‘low place, bottom of valley, shore, beach’; wáapnit ‘place opening out into a broad valley, gentle slope’.
Placing
níčt ‘placing, putting away, burying’.
Plain
áypɨx̣ ‘clearing, flat ground, land down below as seen when coming over the hill’; q̓áax̣ ‘clearing in forest, treeless area’; q̓ɨwíit ‘in the clean’.
Plainsman
áypɨx̣pal ‘person from the plains’.