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NATICK-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 



13 



appeh., ahpeh (-haii),n. a trap, a snare; 

 Is. 8, 14; 24, 17; Job 18, 10; pi. -hanog, 

 -heonog, 2 Sam. 22, 6; Job 22, 10. 

 From pahlieaii, it waits for ('!){n'uppaih, 

 I wait for him, Ps. 130, 5) . Cf. ohppeh. 

 [Narr. ape; pi. apJ/ia»a, traps; wusk- 

 iipehana, new traps. Cf. Oree appit, 

 ' tobacco bag ' . ] 



appesettukqussin (? ) , he kneels; caus.-j- 

 hruli, he made them kneel. Gen. 24, 11; 

 (v. i. ) rest on their knees; to kneel on 

 his knees, 1 K. 8, .54; 2 Chr. 6, 13, etc. 



appesetukqussin, (-un), v. act. intr. he 

 kneels, bows the knee; imperat. 2d pi. 

 ajipesetul-qusmncoi, bow the knee. Gen. 

 41, 43. 



appin, n. a bed (a place to sit or rest on). 

 Lev. 15, 26; Is. 28, 20; vml-appin, his 

 bed. Cant. 3, 7 (as a verb, na wiU-appin, 

 he sits down there, Ruth 4, 1). See 

 appappin, dppu. 



[Abn. thsdkSabSn, lit, eleve de terre; 

 apSn, lit qui ne Test pas. Chip.: "To 

 each person who is a member of the 

 lodge-family is assigned a fixed seat, or 

 habitual abiding place, which is called 

 abbinos." — Sch. ii, 63. Del. achpi ney, 

 a place to sleep on, Zeisb.] 



appohteau, it remains or rests in. 



[Note. — It was the intention of tlie com- 

 piler, judging from his reference under apf;fi- 

 tu7ik, to complete the definition of the term 

 appnhteau, but aside from a marginal note in 

 pencil no reference to it is made in the manu- 

 script.] 



appcosu, apwosu, op-, v. i. he roasts, 

 bakes: pass, it (an. subj.) is roasted, 

 Prov. 12, 27; Is. 44, 16; 1 K. 19, 6 

 {apvdi»i, roasted; appmsish treyaug, 

 roast the meat, C. ). See ap^con. 

 [Del. achpussi, Zeisb.] 



appu, V. i. (1) he sits; nut-a]}, I sit, Ezek. 

 28, 2; pi. appuog, they sit, Ps. 119, 3; 

 suppos. ken apean, thou that sittest, Jer. 

 22, 2. (2) he rests, remains, abides 

 {pevsi), Ps. 10, 8; 1 John 3, 14; im- 

 perat. apsh, pi. apek, apegk, Gen. 22, 5; 

 1 Sam. 19, 2; Matt. 10, 11; suppos. uoh 

 apit, he that abideth, who remains 

 (6 nsvoov), 2 John 9 (matta apei, 'he 

 is not at home,' Prov. 7, 19). (3) he 

 is, he continues to be, lives, in a state 

 where rest or inactivity is implied: toh 

 htldjiiu, where art thou? Gen. 3, 9: 7ia 

 k-utapph}, thou art there, Ps. 139, 8; im- 



appu — continued, 

 perat. na apgh, 'lie there' (remain 

 there), Ex. 24, 12; cf. 1 Sam. 19, 3; .sup- 

 pos. ne apit, where he was, Ex. 20, 21; 

 pi. part, neg apitcheg, they whoare, were, 

 Ex. 7, 18, 21; Luke 5, 7; malta 2nsh nut- 

 dppu, I shall not be. Job 7, 21. With 

 dppu (he is at rest, or inactive) cf. ayeu 

 (he is in place, posited), ahteau (he has 

 himself, or is in possession; habet, se 

 habet; see ohtauwiAl) , ussu (he acts, is 

 doing, agit),and unnixn, wut-iinniin (he 

 is such as, or of the sort of) : the verbs 

 by which Eliot translates, with .sufficient 

 accuracy, the substantive verb of exist- 

 ence. 



[Narr. yo dppitch ewo, let him sit here; 

 mat-apeii, he is not at home. Abn. ned' - 

 dpi, je suis assis; 3d sing. apS. Cree, 

 dppu, (1) he sits; (2) he remains. Del. 

 vfdappiii, achpin, he is there in a par- 

 ticular place; suppos. epit, Zeisb. ; achpo, 

 he is at home, Zeisb.] 



appuhquassumoD (?), n. a pillow; pi. 

 -mmunash, Ezek. 13, 18; uppuhquas»u- 

 mmun-it, on a pillow, JIark 4, 38. See 



[Abn. pS'kSesimSn, coussin de tete; 

 p^kSesin iS, ai cela pour coussin.] 



appuliquau, v. t. he puts over (it) as a 

 covering (e. g. of a floor, side, or roof) ; 

 he ceils (it) with: appuhquati anom.uk- 

 komuk mehtugquash, 'he covered the 

 walls on the inside with wood', 1 K. 

 6, 1.5. 



appuhqudsu, appah-, v. i. he covers, 



puts on that which covers; naslipe 



cedar, he covers [the house] with cedar, 

 and, pass., it is covered, etc., 1 K. 7,3; 

 suppos. inan. ne dbuhquosik, its cover- 

 ing. Cant. 3, 10. Hence uppohquos, 

 obhohquos, aboliquos, n. a tent, the cov- 

 ering of a tent, a covert, Ex. 40, 19; Is. 

 4, 6. 



[Narr. abockqudsinash (inan. ]>1.), the 

 mats with which the wigwam was cov- 

 ered. Chip. ali-p6k-we, covering for a 

 lodge.] 



appuminneonash, n. pi. parched corn, 

 1 Sam. 17, 17; (up-) 2 Sam. 17, 28. 

 From apwdu, he bakes or roasts, and 

 min-neash, kernels or fruit. 



[Narr. auptimmineanash, parched 

 corn; aHpihninta-naw-saumj), jiarched 



