TRUMBULL] 



NATICK-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 



27 



hasinnekous. See n.flnnekdug. 



hassun, n. a stmie: linxxmi, pi. -nash, El. 

 Gr. 10; dim. haxxiuihiif.i, a little stone, 

 ib. p. 12; pi. -sash, little stones, 'gravel', 

 Prov. 20, 17. From a word signifying 

 to pierce, to cut (?). 



[Chip, assin, pi. -»»/ I inan. ), Bar.; 

 ossin, assin, pi. (an.) -ureii, Sch. Cree 

 ass'mnee; dimin. asshmis. Del. achmn, 

 Zeisb.] 



hassunekSaz. See assinvekous. 



hassunnek, -negk, n. a cave, Gen. 23, 

 17,20. (That which covers? Qi. hashm- 

 nuhai, a hat. ) 



hassunneutunk, n. a (stone) wall, Jer. 

 .=il, 44; Ezek. i:?, 12. 



*liawunshecli ( Xarr. ), farewell, R. W. 



hennaii, hennou, ahunou, v. t. an. he 

 calls him (by a name or appellation; 

 appellat. Cf. ussoirenaii, he calls him 

 by his name, nominat); pass, he is 

 called: pish hennou Ishah, 'she shall be 

 called Woman', Gen. 2, 23; pish hennau 

 magmhiin, ' he shall be called Bountiful ' 

 (i. e. the Giver), Is. 32, 5; suffix form 

 vnittimih, appellat eum, he addresses 

 him, he calls him: David nagum wut- 

 tinuh l=u-ut-henna-uh'!'\ mi.m-Manit- 

 tmm, 'David himself calleth him [my] 

 Lord', Mark 12, 37; ioh kuUehenit, 'what 

 art thou called?' Gen. 32, 27; noh ahhenit 

 {ahhunut, Mass. Ps. ) he who is called, 

 John 9, 11; suppos. Ahnnont, when he 

 calls, when calling (him), 1 Pet. 3, 6. 

 Mutual or reciprocal heltuog, they call 

 one another, they address one another, 

 Gen. 11, 3. Vbl. n. hettcowonk, hettu- 

 onk, mutual address, language, speech, 

 Gen. 11, 1. See ahenit. 



[Narr. tahma l=^toh hennau'], 'what 

 is his name?' how is he called?] 



hettam, v. t. inan. he calls (it); pass. 

 hettamun, it is called [cf. tissmiveltam, he 

 names (it) ; iissmirettamim, it is named] ; 

 pi. hettamwog, they call (it), Ps. 49, 11; 

 pass, mwesuonk hettamun, his name is 

 called, Luke 2, 21 ; hettamun, it is called, 

 Gen. 2, 11, 14; Is. 56, 7. 



[Xari'. tahHtamen [^toli hettamun'], 

 what is this called?] 



-hk. See -'A--. 



*Hobbanioco, n. 'their evil God,' Lech- 

 ford's PI. Dealing, .52. "That we sup- 

 pose their Devil, they call Hahantouk," 

 Capt. J. Smith (1631). '• Aliamorho or 



*Hobbainoco — continued. 



Cheepie," Josselyn Voy. (See chepy.) 

 "In the night . . . they will not budge 

 from their own dwellings for fear of 

 their Abamocho (the Devil) whom they 

 much fear." — Wood's N. E. Prospect, 

 pt. 2, ch. 8. "Whom they [the In- 

 dians near Plymouth] call Hobbamock, 

 and to the northward of us, Hobbamo- 

 qui; this, as far as we can conceive, is 

 the Devil."— E.Winslow's Rel. (1624). 



-hog, -hogk, n. (1) body, corpus, that 

 which is external or which covers the 

 living man or animal. For hogki (it 

 covers), or hogkm (he covers himself, 

 wears as covering). With impers. pre- 

 fix, muhhog, the (any) body; pi. ??iM/i- 

 hogkmog. El. Gr. 9. (2) the person; 

 with the prefixed pronouns it has the 

 force of ipse; nuhhog [^ti'hog], my body, 

 or myself, ego ipse; kuhhog, thy body, 

 thyself; louhhog, his body, himself. 



[Narr. nohock, my body; vuhock, the 

 body (i. e. his body). Abn. nhaglie, 

 Shaghe, mon, son corps. Del. hackey, 

 Zeisb. Cree weydui, the body; ne-yow, 

 my body, myself.] 



hogki, V. i. it covers, or serves as a cov- 

 ering; as n. wuh-hogki, pi. uiih-hogkiash, 

 the scales (of a fish). Job 41, 15; sup- 

 pos. umh-hogkiit, if it have (that which 

 has) scales; pi. negwuh-hogkiitcheg, they 

 which have scales. Lev. 11, 9 ( with inan. 

 or impers. subj. wuhhogkiegig, v. 10). 

 So, vmh-hogki, a shell (v.'ohhogke, C. ). 

 Cf. Engl, shell, scale; Germ, schale; 

 Greek xoXeoi, SkvXoj'. 



[Narr. suckaiihock [sucki-wuhhogki], 

 black-shell money, E. W. Abn. Sara- 

 haghi; ecaille de poisson.] 



hogkcD, V. i. he clothes or covers him- 

 self; with inan. subj., it is a covering, it 

 clothes; sometimes v. t. he wears (or 

 is covered by) it, Prov. 23, 21; Ezek. 

 9, 2; Ps. 93, 1; imperat. 2d pi. hogkmk, 

 'put ye on', clothe yourselves with, 

 Eph. 6, 11; suppos. an. hogqut, dqut, 

 agquit, when he wears, or is clothed 

 with, Ps. 109, 18; 68, 13; Dan. 12, 7; 7ie 

 dqut, agquit, that which he weal's, which 

 'is on him'. Gen. 37, 23; 1 K. 11, 30. 

 Vbl. n. hogkmonk, clothing, a garment. 

 Num. 31, 20; Prov. 30, 4; pi. -ongash 

 (aukmonk, C. ). With a subst. express- 

 ing the thing worn or [lut on, hogkiin- 

 ninii. V. t. he puts (it) on. 



