yíkläs I pinch; iyíkläs I pinch myself.

Causative voice. This form had better be called a derivative form than a voice, as will appear from the following instances:

isipúidshäs I cause to take.

púskäs I fast; puskipúidshäs I make fast, puskä′dshäs I make, cause to fast; puskidshä′dshäs I cause to fast for initiation.

hátkis it is white, hatídshäs I whiten.

kí`läs I know, ki`lídshäs I inform, apprize, i-uki`lkuídshäs I explain myself.

huí`läs I stand, hui`lídshäs I set up, place, make stand.

Impersonal voice. A paradigm of an impersonal verb, inflected with its pronominal object, is as follows:

isanhí`lis it is good for me (hí`li good), 2 s. istchinhí`lis, 3 s. isinhí`lis; ispunhí`lis it is good for us, 2 pl. istchinhí`lagis, 3 pl. isinhí`lagis.

Other Conjugational Forms.

Paradigms of verbs inflected with the subject-pronoun standing either separate or incorporated:

ánit ómäs I do, am the cause ofantalgósis I am alone (for ánit álgosis)
tchímit ómadshkshtchintalgósis thou art alone
ímit ómisintalgósis
pómit ómīs we dopuntálgosis and puntalgosákis
tchintágit ómadshkshtchintalgosákis
(i)mitágit ómīsintalgosákis

Objective or compound conjugation.