Kappa piti kukap talk

Kappa piti kukap talk (Classical Taot: kapha epe tekhathe al ) or Gappaj peti kokap te jalk (Proto-Läptälm: *gappa ipi ti kuk ap ti alk), among other variants, is an Eastern Koolpallalian mock spell mainly used by children when playing, but also by adults in a humorous manner. It is roughly equivalent to the English phrase hocus-pocus.

History
The earliest ever attestation of the phrase is in a late sixth millennium inscription written in Koolpallalian hieroglyphs that mentions how the native slaves use a saying to end prayers the text renders rougly as gp-ft-kk-pt-lk, using the characters gapa 'to be', feti 'god', koku 'eye', pata 'to know' and laka 'to scratch'. Based on this inscription, the spell is believed to be an old incantation honouring the gods in a now extinct native language of the southeastern Koolpallalian valleys.