1,400 term are intransitive verbs

Walk

  1. tk̓ʷanáyti ‘walk’;
  2. tk̓ʷanáytitˀuyi ‘begin to walk’;
  3. tk̓ʷáwat̓wi ‘walk ahead, take the lead’;
  4. tk̓ʷátunik ‘walk upstream’;
  5. tk̓ʷáypx̣ ‘walk downstream’;
  6. tk̓ʷanáynač ‘walk inside’;
  7. tk̓ʷáwaanaynač ‘walk inside’;
  8. tk̓ʷáwaanayt ‘walk out’;
  9. tk̓ʷátux̣ ‘walk home’;
  10. tk̓ʷáwaatux̣ ‘walk home’;
  11. tk̓ʷáx̣ʷaami ‘walk up’;
  12. tk̓ʷaničánwi ‘walk down’;
  13. tk̓ʷáx̣aap ‘walk between, walk into the next room’;
  14. tk̓ʷáwaanikapa ‘walk feeling one’s way into brush’;
  15. tk̓ʷanínn ‘walk here and there’;
  16. cáwt̓alayti ‘walk along’ (plural subject);
  17. cáwt̓alaylak ‘walk inside’ (plural subject);
  18. cáwt̓alayt ‘walk out’ (plural subject);
  19. cáwt̓aliln ‘walk about’ (plural subject);
  20. cuníncuninn ‘go around all over, walk back and forth’;
  21. náwina ‘walk while talking’;
  22. tk̓ulín ‘be curled up; walk into thoughts’;
  23. wínatˀuyi ‘begin to walk’;
  24. látk̓ʷanayti ~ látk̓ʷalayti ‘walk along leisurely’;
  25. wiyápni ‘walk out, emerge, appear’;
  26. kʷstín ‘walk out in a huff’.

Wander

wiyáninn ‘travel around, go here and there’; sɨ́mwina ‘wander around, go here and there’; čáwyaninn ‘wander from place to place, be in exile, be homeless, bum around’.

War dance

páax̣amn ‘pow-wow’.

Warm

c̓múyn ‘be warm’; lác̓muyn ‘be warm’; láx̣ʷayx̣ ‘be warm, hot, have a fever’; lác̓muyi ‘be warm, warm up by a fire’.

Wash

yápax̣aanp̓a ‘wash up against’.

Washout

x̣uuwí ‘be a gully or washout (land form)’.

Water

páluun ‘be situated in water’; tíluun ‘sit in water’; ƛúpwaaluun ‘jump into water’; wáluun ‘go into water’; wáaluun ‘run into water’; yáwaač̓aak ‘hang onto in the water (as snails or eels)’.

Wave

amúyn ‘wave (of water)’; wáylatn ‘wave, undulate (such as grass in the wind)’.

x̣láktɨmn

Talk a lot, be talkative, talk too much. ix̣láktɨmša ‘he is talking too much’. [NE ɨlɨ́x̣tɨmn.]

x̣lɨ́p

Open. ix̣lɨ́pa pčɨ́š ‘the door opened’; čáx̣ɨlp ‘open’; x̣lɨ́pni ‘opened’. Ablaut: x̣áalp ‘wide open’.

Wear

náamn ‘wear out, fade away’; ƛ̓ɨ́x̣ʷn ‘be used up, wear out’.

Wedding

pámaliin ‘have a wedding’.

Weep

náx̣ti ‘cry, weep’; máynax̣ti ‘weep in the morning’; táwnax̣ti ‘weep at night’; wiyánax̣ti ~ náwiyanax̣ti ‘weep along the way’; wiyátawnax̣ti ‘go along weeping at night’.

Weigh

walúuk ‘be up in the air’.

Well

níix̣wi ‘do well, do good, make friends, be at peace’.

Wet

yáƛ̓pi ‘be wet’.

x̣ɨpɨ́p

Shake, tremble. ix̣pɨ́pa ‘he shook, trembled’. See x̣ɨpɨpɨ́pn.

x̣ɨpɨpɨ́pn

Shiver, shake, tremble. Also x̣ɨ́pɨpɨpn, x̣pɨ́pn. ix̣pɨpɨ́pna ‘he shivered’; ix̣pɨpɨ́pša ‘he is shivering’; x̣ɨ́pɨpɨpnaaš ‘I shivered’; x̣ɨ́pɨpɨpšaaš ‘I am shivering’; x̣ɨ́pɨpɨpšaaš k̓asáawitki ‘I am shivering from the cold’; ix̣pɨ́pna tiičám ~ ix̣ɨ́pɨpɨpna tiičám ‘the earth quaked, there was an earthquake’. [NP /x̣p´ppn/.]

Whinney

ínɨmn ‘whinney, nicker (horse), moo (cow), crow, chirp’.

Whirl

amúywaasklik ‘swirl (of water)’.