120 ]5rigade-Surgeon J. E. T. Aitchison's Notes on Products 



Kir tag, klrthcMj — the grass Eragrostis cynosuroides. 

 Klsa, kesa — A^^j^i" — klse — a purse, a pocket ; applied 



to the enormous, soft, hollow, flabby galls of the 



Elm, Ulmus species. 

 Kishmish — Ji.^i — raisins, the dried fruit of Vitis 



viNiFERA. There are two well-marked kinds in 



the trade identified by their colour, the red 



surkh, and the green sahz. 

 Kishnlj — ^j^^^ — CicHORiuM Endivia and Cichorium 



Intybus ; a blue flower. 

 Klsht — cLjJ^j^ — Sweet milk curdled, the curds of 



milk, a brick, anything hard, Manna, 

 Kocir — -j\y^ — kodra — x_,l^^ — a basket. 

 Ko — *i' — koh — s^^ — a hill, a mountain. 

 Koha — i>^y<, — a hillock, a knoll ; the Hawthorn, 



Crataegus Oxyacantha. 

 Kohar-harar — the shrub and nodes of Eremostachys 



LABiosA, and Eremostachys Kegaliana. 

 Kohcha — aso^^^ — kohja — a hill, a hillock ; the 



Hawthorn, Crat^gus Oxyacantha. 

 Koh-tor — [the beloved of the mountain], the hill 



peach, the Baluchistan and Helmand name for 



Stocksia brahuica and Lycium barbarum. 

 Kokalak — >^k^y$ — the pod which contains the cotton 



before it is ripe. 

 Kokh — ^^^ — a house without a window, a small hut 



of reeds. 

 Kokh-i-pela — the cocoon of the silk-worm, 

 Kokndr — jUi'^i' — the Opium Poppy, Papaver somni- 



FERUM. 



Kolak — Jj^i" — a dish in which women keep their 



cotton that is prepared ready for spinning. 

 Komi, kum — *.^ — kon — the shrub Astragalus hera- 



tensis, and another species, that jdeld a form 



of gum Tragacanth. 

 Konda — fuel ; more correctly fuel consisting of dry 



cow-dung. 



