Kottish:kōja 'elk'; Ass. (М., Сл., Кл.) kója 'deer (rangifer)'
Comments:ССЕ 226. In КС 166 the root is not separated from *χV̄j 'elk' (q.v.), with which it is also compared in Werner 2, 62 - on the general (and unnecessary) confusion about this word see under *gaj 'go round, return'.
Comments:ССЕ 226. Ket kъ̄ńe, Yug kъ̄ń, Kott kinig reflect a compound *gǝʔn + xiʔG "light + day". One should also note Ket kʌńiŋ "people (name of the Kets in "bears' language")" - lit., "the light ones" ( > Selk. qɔ̄nnɨŋ "Ket", see Helimski КС 241). Werner 1, 474 (without reconstruction), 2, 257 (with some hesitation about Kott. tegan).
Comments:ССЕ 227. Werner 1, 472 <*kʌʔt>; doubts the relation of kitej6 'young' which he prefers to analyze as a compound kiʔ 'new' + *tɨj- 'grow' (Werner 1, 432).
Kottish:kēti, g. kētī, pl. kētaŋ, kētān; ketě (Бол.)
Arin:ЛОТЪ (Лоск.) "winter" - a writing slip instead of КОТЪ?
Comments:ССЕ 227. Not quite clear is the relationship of Pump. (Сл., Срсл.) kinčidin, (Кл.) kɨčidin "cold" (Срсл. n. "стужа"): the Pump. form points rather to *-s-, but a palatalisation of *-t- before a front vowel is also not excluded. Werner 1, 475 - misquoting my reconstruction (*kǝte instead of *gǝte).
Comments:ССЕ 238. The Kott. form is either a compound or derivate (perhaps reflecting an old plural *gaʔs-Vŋ). In Timonina 1978 it is treated as a loanword from Hak. xazɨk, Tuv. kažɨk id. - but these forms do not have any secure Turkic etymology (derivation from *Kaĺuk 'spoon' in VEWT... seems hardly plausible) and may well themselves have a Yenisseian origin. Werner (1, 434) compares the Ket-Yug form with Kott. hēči 'footwear' - which he also compares with Ket. kassat (see *kassad), to say nothing of the correct comparison with Ket tɛ:śi (see *cēse).
Comments:ССЕ 227. Ket-Yug reflect a compound with *ʔuĺ- 'bone' (see *ʔuĺaʒ 'rib') in the first part. Werner 2, 339 (doubts the Ket-Kott. comparison, for an unpronounced reason).
Comments:ССЕ 228. External data show that the Assan meaning here is more archaic (in Ket and Yug "middle" < "waist, back"). In any case the suggestion of Ket < Selk. kɨ 'middle' (Helimski КС 242) is hardly justified. Werner 1, 482 gives a reconstruction <*kɨʔǝqǝ>, but for some reason rejects the obvious Ket-Ass. match.
Ket:kɔɣat5 "marrow", (Werner 1, 444) "Knochen des Unterschenkels; Unterbein", (Werner 1, 440) kó-ńeŋ 'Knochenmark aus mehreren Knochen"
Yug:kɔʔ
Kottish:kō-naŋ, pl. -an
Comments:ССЕ 228. Ket has a compound with aʔt 'bone', with epenthetic -ɣ-; Kottish also has a compound with *nɔʔŋ > *dɔʔŋ 'brain' q. v. See Werner 1, 440 <*koʔ>, 444, 445.
Comments:ССЕ 228. Probable Ket and Kottish matches see under *sVŋgVl-. The same root is possibly present in Kott. kal-tapen "wedge (for splitting logs)". Werner 1, 445 <*koʔǝl / *koʔl>.
Ket:kuʔt, pl. kūŕeŋ1 (Bak., Sur. kūdǝŋ1) 'girdle'
Kottish:kūra, g. kūrei, pl. kūrakŋ "strap, string, belt"; Ass. kúra (М., Сл., Кл.) "string, strap"
Comments:ССЕ 229. Werner 1, 458 <*kuʔt>. The Kott. word, despite Werner's doubts, is a perfect phonetic and semantic match for Ket. kuʔt, and cannot be regarded as a Turkism (Turk. *Kur 'belt' fails to explain -a in Kott. kūra).