^ 



*Abbainoclio. See *chepy; *Hobhamoco. 



*abockqu6sin-asli (Narr. ), n. pi. 'the 

 iiiatf of the house' (with which the 

 wigwam was covered), R. W. See 

 (ijipii}t<jii<').t)i : Hppdhquox. 



abohquas, n. a mouse. See mixlialioli- 



•l"""- 



abohquos, ii. a covert; xokanon, a 



covert from rain, Is. 4, 8. See appuh- 

 ipi(j-m; iip2)6!iquos. 



*aca'wm.en (Narr.), on the other side of, 

 lieyond. See omihjme. 



*achincDwonk, vl)l. n. news, C. See 

 iniiirheniajkuu. 



adchaii, v. i. lie hunts, is hunting. Vbl. n. 

 lulrhdonk; audcMonk, hunting, what is 

 taken by hunting, Prov. 12, 27. N. 

 agent, adcha^n, a hunter, Gen. 10, 9 

 (adchden-in, a fowler, C). With an. 

 obj. adchanaii, he hunts (him, live 

 game); pi. -andog, Mic. 7, 2; suppos. 

 achanont, when he hunts, when hunt- 

 ing. Lev. 17, 13; infin. achamit, to hunt, 

 C. From ahchv, he strives after, is dili- 

 gent or active to secure. 



[Narr. auchaui, he is gone to hunt 

 or fowl; n'taucMumen, I go a fowling 

 or hunting. Cree ach, he is active, 

 diligent.] 



-adchaubuk, in comp. words, root, or 

 r..,,ts. ^t'v in„lrha,dmk: 



adchuwompag, ' in the morning watch ' , 

 jnst before light, Ex. 14, 24; Judg. 16, 2. 

 Suppos. of ulchuwompan (it dawns, 

 light comes), q. v.; no pajeh utchuwom- 

 jKniil. 'until the day dawn', 2 Pet. 1, 19. 



adt, at, prep, in, at, to. El. Gr. 22 

 (sometimes written ahhut): adt yaut 

 naiyag, upon the four corners, Ex. 38, 2; 

 \_ayeuonk'\ adt nepaginit hasliob, [a place] 

 for spreading nets upon, Ezek. 26, 14 

 [ahllut sepagenit, ibid. 47, 10). 

 As a prefix, adt (sometimes at, iit, or 



adt, &t — continued. 



'0 isapparently related to o/i (a «, he has; 

 ohteau (se habet), it is; ohtae, belonging 

 to, or possessing (a quality, attribute, 

 etc.). So, in the Cree, according to 

 Howse (Gr. 21), oo prefixed, or, before 

 a vowel, not, "shows that the subject 

 possesses the noun — he has, i. e., owns, 

 or possesses (it)," as "assani, a snow- 

 shoe; oot-assam-ii, he has snowshoes." 

 [Vineyard Rec. t<i, tah.l 



adtahshe [(ult-talii>he], adv. as often aa, 

 as many as. Rev. 3, 19; ailaiche, Rev. 

 n, 6; ahhut tahshe, 2 K. 4, 8; uttajche, 

 1 Cor. 11, 25, 26. See tohsu; uttmche. 



[Narr. aydtche, as often as. Cree 

 ■it-lAssu-uk, they are so many; hi It-tdse- 

 chick, as many as they are. Del. endchi, 

 so much as, as many; eudchen, so often 

 as, Zeisb.] 



adtahtou, v. t. he hides (it). Matt. 25, 18; 

 nut-adtahtau-un, I hide it, Ps. 119, 11; 

 .Ter. 13, 5; imper. 2d pers. adtalitaaxh, 

 hide it, Jer. 13, 4. This is a caus. inan. 

 form, from a primary not fomid in 

 Eliot. See*«frfa/t (Narr. ),an apron, = 

 adtati, he hides. See also adtashaii. 



adtannegen, -nekin, v. t. (inan. subj.) 

 it brings forth, bears, produces (as the 

 earth when cultivated, plants, a culti- 

 vated tree, fruit, etc.). See tannegen. 

 The prefix adt marks appropriation, a 

 growing, or bringing forth, to or for an 

 owner. 



adtannekitteau, v. i. he plants (lays the 

 foundation i if I liis house; suppos. adtan- 

 aekitteadl qu^sakqimnit, when he built 

 (founded) his house on a rock. Matt. 



7, 24; naguntu, in the sand, 



V. 26. With inan. subj., adtanehteau, 

 nttan-, the house is planted, or founded, 

 V. 25. See wekittraii. 



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