NATICK-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 



ahtuk — cont i nued . 



(liyomp, ayimp, i:iiiiiini>, 'luirt', 'roe', 

 is Abn. dianhe, the male of Jeer or 

 deerkind, a buck. Narr. hiltiomp [keht- 

 eiyomp}, 'a great buck'; and so, pau- 

 cottduwaw, -iciAwal, a buck. Del. ayapeii, 

 Zeisb. East. Chip, ayarbey awaskesh, 

 male deer, Long. 



eiyompAemese, pi. -sog, 'young hart'. 

 Cant. 8, 14; 'young roes'. Cant. 4, 5; 

 dimin. of eiyomp. 



qunnegk, pi. -gqudoy, -quoog, ' hind ' , 

 Gen. 49, 21; Cant. 2, 7; a doe, the female 

 deer. Narr. aunan, qunneke (the former 

 term corresponding to Abn. hi'rar, fe- 

 male of deer-kind); qurmequ&wese, a 

 young doe. 



mmsuog, 'fallow deer'. See 7«(»s. 



ahtiishkouwau, pi. -waog, 'noble.s', 

 principal men, Num. 21, 18. 



[Narr. alauskawauog, -kowaug, rulers, 

 lords. R. W. 120, 13.3.] 



ahunou. See hmiiai'i. 



*aiaiiiiau, v. t. an. he imitates (him); 

 nuitiamxdu, I imitate, C. See 6mt6h- 

 konaucmat; unneit. 



*aianne, C. See eiydne. 



*alontogkom.p, n. a knave, C. 



a'i'jpauehteau, v. cans, he maketh 

 calm (inishittaihineuh, the storm), Ps. 

 107, 29. See imwipin. 



ait, suppr>s. of ayett, q. v. 



aiulikontOTwaonk. See auwakijntovAonk. 



aiuskoiantam, v. i. he repents, is sorry; 

 iiut-aimkokirdam, I repent, Jer. 18, 10; 

 imperat. 2d sing, aiuxkoiantamaali, re- 

 pent thou, be sorry for, Acts 8, 22. 



aiyomp, a buck. See ahtuk. 



*akesu-og (Narr.), they are cnunting. 

 See ogkelamunat. 



akodchu, v. i. he is ashamed; md-aknilj 

 (iiiit-dgkodcli, C. ), I am ashamed, Luke 

 16, 3; matia akodchuog, they were not 

 ashamed. Gen. 2, 25 (nut-dgkodchehlk- 

 qun, it ashameth me, C). Vbl. n. 

 -chumik, shame, Prov. 18, 13 [ogkodchu- 

 onk, C. ). Caus. an. akodchehheau, he 

 shames (him), makes him ashamed; 

 ktd-a-kodchehhioog, thou puttest them to 

 shame, Ps. 44, 7. Imperat. 2d-!- 3d 

 pers. (ihque akodjheh, put me not tn 

 shame, Ps. 119, 31- 



amaeii, amaei, v. i. he departs, goes 

 away, withdraws himself, Job 27, 21; 

 Gal. 2, 12 (without reference to the 

 mode or to the act of going, but simply 

 to the separation or removal of one per- 

 son or thing from another); imperat. 

 2d pers. sing, anidiih, depart, go away; 

 suppos. amdlt, amdiit, when he went 

 away; with an. obj. anidei'iau, he goes 

 away from him; amaeuoh, amayeoh, 

 he went away from him, Judg. 6, 21 (?), 

 more commonly, amaeJdauau, he de- 

 parts or goes away from (him), 1 Sam. 



16, 14; imperat. 2d -f- 1st sing, amaeih- 

 tah, depart thou from me, Luke 5, 8; 

 suppos. part, aiiieldauont, when he de- 

 parts, when departing, from (him), Jer. 



17, 5. 



-Smag, -§,inaug, pi. dmagquag, n. gen. 

 for 'fish taken by the hook.' See 

 *mimaui. 



[amakompau, v. i. he stands away;] 

 imperat. -paiiish, stand thou away, C. 



amaoolikauau, V. t. an. he drives (him) 

 away; pi. -kauAog, they drive away. 

 Job 24, 3. 



-g,maug. See -dmag. 



amaunum, v. t. he takes (it) away. Job 

 20, 19; Judg. 8, 21; imperat. amaiwsh, 

 take thou (it) away, Prov. 25, 4. From 

 amdeu, with characteristic (-num) of 

 action by the hand. Cf. *aumai'd. 

 [Narr. amdtinsh, take it away.] 



amaushau, v. i. he departs secretly or 

 with evil purpose, or the like; he 'slips 

 away', 1 Sam. 19, 10. From amAei'i, 

 with sh of derogation. 



amayeuonk [^amaeuonkl, vbl. n. de- 

 parture, going away, 2 Tim. 4, 6. 



*amisque [=un!(sg], Muh. a Vieaver, 

 Edw. Cf. titmmnnk, a name which was 

 apjilied properly only to the living 

 adult animal. (Abn. tevia'kSe, castor 

 vivant. ) Amisk, a generic name for 

 beaver-kind, has been retained in the 

 principal Algonquian dialects: Abn. 

 pepSn-emeskS, nipen-emeskS, winter 

 beaver, summer beaver; kemesks, great 

 Ijeaver, or beaver skin; alsimeskS (or 

 naiib-imeskS) , male, nSsemeskS (or sk- 

 fmeskS), female beaver. Cree umUk. 

 Chip. amU-. Hhawn. amixhwah. Miami 

 mahkwaw. Del. (Minsi) amochk, Zeisb. 



