1,401 term are intransitive verbs

Heal

ílapaša ‘lay hands on for healing’; láx̣pi ‘heal with shamanic powers’; náwapaša ~ náwapawa ‘heal with the hands while singing’; płɨ́x̣i ‘heal with medicines/herbs’; šapúulkšapuulk ‘blow water in healing ceremony’; twatíwi ‘heal (the sick) as an Indian doctor’; wač̓ák ‘heal by sucking out the sickness’.

p̓ɨ́łn

Be stuck (in hole). Ablaut: p̓áał ‘stuck’. [Cf. NP /p̓´łn/ ‘be a hole’.]

Here and there

ninn ‘move about, go here and there’ (bound root).

pní

Emerge, come out, come out into the open. áwnaš pníšamš ‘I’m coming out now’; nákpni ‘bring out’; pníwayč ‘not want to do more’; tamáwaapni ‘throw out’; tútapni ‘go to town on Saturday’; ƛúpwaapni ‘jump out into the open’; šápni ‘ask’; šúpni ‘jut out (land or rock ridge)’; wáapni ‘run out into the open’. [NP /pn .]

pníwayč

Not want to do more. pníwayčanam ‘you didn’t want to do more’.

High

pášwin ‘be high priced’; x̣ʷáami ‘go up high’.

pɨ́sc̓ati

Be foggy. ipásc̓atiša ‘it is foggy’. [NP /ˀpéce/.]

p̓ɨ́sn

Be a hole. Bound. páp̓sk ‘pierce the skin’; súp̓sk ‘string beads’. Ablaut: p̓áaš ‘soft, mushy’. [NP /p̓´łn/.]

p̓ɨškʷín

Smile. p̓ɨškʷínk ‘smile!’. U mostly kiˀíisn. [Cf. K p̓ɨskʷí ‘high mountain’ (Jacobs 1929:187:1; etc.).]

Hold

lɨšt̓ɨ́x̣n ‘stick, be stuck, adhere, be attached’.

Hole

tqún ‘be dug, be a hole in the ground’.

Holler

wáyk̓ʷanwayk̓ʷann ‘shout around, put on the war whoop’; náwayx̣ti ~ náwiyawayx̣ti ‘run along hollering’.

Home

túx̣n ‘return, go home’.

Homeless

čáwyaninn ‘wander from place to place, be in exile, be homeless, bum around’.

Honest

tk̓ʷɨ́kʷn ‘be straight, be honest’.

Hop

ƛúpn ‘jump, hop’; wiyáƛupn ‘jump along, hop along’.

Hot

láx̣ʷayx̣ ‘be warm, have a fever’; lax̣ʷayx̣łáyi ‘have the flu, have a fever’.

ptá

Be situated. Inanimate distributive. iptá ‘they’re standing there’. See also ptún.

pɨ́taa

Grow. Distributive. Also ptáa. iptáaša ‘they are growing’; pɨ́taat ‘trees’.

ptún

Be situated. Distributive inanimate subject. iptún tkʷátat ‘the food is set out’; paptún táp̓aš ‘the pine trees are set out’. [NP /wíˀpetun/.]