kúułn ‘be satisfied, have enough, be full, satiated’.
1,401 term are intransitive verbs
Scatter
pɨ́x̣ʷn; lápux̣; tíiłn ‘be spread out, be scattered’; wiyápux̣n ‘scatter, disperse, separate’.
School
skúuli ‘attend school’; skúulita ‘go to school’.
Scoot
tísɨmnayti ‘scoot along’; wásɨmnayti ‘scoot along on haunches’; sɨ́mˀɨlɨpn ‘scoot up to the top’; tísɨmluun ‘scoot into water’; tísɨmninn ‘scoot around’.
Scorch
láq̓ʷšq̓ʷši ‘burn, char, toast’; láwaačayč ‘singe, burn, flame’.
Scrape
x̣áap ‘be loosened, scraped off, stripped off, peeled off, sliced off; crawl under’ (bound root).
Seep
łłáwn ‘leak, drip’; p̓ín ‘drain, ooze, drain out’.
Separate
páa ‘be separate’ (bound root); wáapaa ‘veer off the road, separate (as of a road forking in two directions)’; páwiyapaa ‘part, fork’.
Set
tináynač ‘set (sun, moon)’; anáš ‘set (of sun/moon)’.
Settle
táwyanayk ‘live, settle down to live’.
ƛ̓ɨmux̣
Be covered. Bound. čáƛ̓ɨmux̣ ‘put on bandana’; íƛ̓ɨmux̣i ‘cover’; páƛ̓ɨmux̣ ‘cover’; tamáƛ̓ɨmux̣i ‘cover over’; tamáwaaƛ̓ɨmux̣ ‘cover’; twáƛ̓mx̣ʷk ‘rope fish in shallow rapids’; wáƛ̓ɨmux̣ ‘cover up’; páƛ̓ɨmux̣ʷi ‘horse with a white blaze in the forehead’; sápƛ̓ɨmux̣i ‘ground cherry, Physalis longifolia‘; ƛ̓ɨ́ƛ̓ɨmux̣ ‘red-winged blackbird, Agelaius phoeniceus‘. [NP /wqʷc̓m/; /kteˀ/.]
Shade
láwaašq̓iši ‘be shaded’.
Shadowed
šq̓ín ‘be shadowed by cloud, eclipse’.
Shake
iyún ‘tremble, quake’; iyúˀyun ‘keep shaking’; x̣pɨ́pn ‘tremble, be earthquake’; x̣ɨ́pɨpɨpn ‘shiver, tremble, quake (earth)’.
Shallow
ƛ̓áapn ‘be shallow, dry up’.
Shatter
łíłn ‘break in pieces, fall apart’.
ƛ̓ɨ́pn
Be ripped, flaked. iƛ̓ɨ́pša síil ‘the cloth is ripped’; ƛ̓ɨ́pni ‘ripped, flaked’; ƛ̓píip ‘wing dress’; yáƛ̓pit ‘wet’; c̓ɨ́pc̓p ‘flaked salmon’. Ablaut: ƛ̓áapn ‘be shallow’; ƛ̓íipn ‘split off’ (bound); ƛ̓úupn ‘dry out’.
Shine
láqayx̣i ‘light up, gleam’; lúxn ‘glow’; ičún ‘shine (of the sun)’; láqayx̣itx̣awn ‘shine through, light up’; lɨ́šqayx̣i ‘light up, spark, sparkle, be northern lights’.
Shiver
x̣ɨ́pɨpɨpn ‘shake, tremble, quake (earth)’.
Shop
tútapni ‘go shopping, go to town on Saturday’.