TRUJIBL'LL] 



NATICK-ENGLISH DICTIONAKY 



(ii) 



mukkuttuk, n. the knee, Is. 45, 23; pi. 

 -nhinng, .Joli .S, 12; Is. 35, 3; 3d pers. 

 xikkulluk, hiti knee. For m'f/iiituk (from 

 quttuv-ni, or rather from the same base), 

 that which sinks down or goes down. 

 [So, Ang. Sax. cneow, Goth, hneigan, 

 Engl, knee, and Ang. Sax. hnig-an, incli- 

 nare, incurvare.] Nish noh mukkulluk 

 nmwaeu, every knee bows, Phil. 2, 10. 



[Abn. nekedekS, nion genou. Del. 

 guigi', Zeisb.] 



mukos. See inohkiutKa. 



mukqs, n. an awl, Ex. 21, 6; Deut. 15, 

 17. From ithqunen. it is jwinted. Cf. 

 malikos. 



, [Narr. (pi.) miickssuck, awl blades. 

 Del. muckoos, awl, nail.] 



mukquoshim, n. a wolf (El. Gr. 9), 

 Is. 65, 25; Jer. 5, (i; mummugquo>:hia)i, 

 Gen. 49, 27; inukr]iiisslium,C. (who has 

 alsii iiattcoliqiixsuoij, wolves). For miik- 

 qaoMiii the ilass. Rs. (John 10, 12) has 

 nattoahqus. From mcohwhau, he eats 

 live flesh, with {-oshijn) the generic de- 

 terminative of the names of beasts. 



[Narr. muckquash'mi, pi. -rnwock; 

 moattdqus, a black wolf; mttdqus, a wolf; 

 natoquashunck, a wolf-skin coat. Peq. 

 mucks, Stiles. Chip, mah ing gun, me m' 

 gun, mawekan (maheengun, J.), Sch. 

 II, 464. Menom. manh-tvawe. Shawn. 

 in'wdi U'ah. Mex. mayaquen lqu = k'\. 

 Otomi muhii.] 



mukquttunk, n. the throat; kuh-quttunk- 

 an'it, to thy throat, Prov. 23, 2. From 

 the same root as mukkuttuk; m'qutiunk, 

 the going down (the swallow? or the 

 bending of the head?). 



[Narr. gutluck. Abn. mekSlaiigan, 

 gosier; 3d pers. akSdangan. Del. gunta, 

 'swallow it', Zeisb.] 



mukukki, (it is) bare, bald, destitute of 

 covering, Jer. 48, 37. 



[Narr. iniickucki, bare (without nap, 

 said ul rloth).] 



mummishkod, n. abundance, 'great 



store'; meechum, 'store of victual', 



2 Chr. 11, 11. From miB»>; augm. ma- 

 inissi, very great. 



-mung-quot, -quodt, suppos. -mungquok, 

 the generic determinative of verbs of 

 smell. See asuhtmmgquodt; maiche- 

 mungquot (it smells badly); weetemung- 

 quot (it smells sweetly), etc. 



*niunnannock (Narr.), a name of the 

 sun and of the moon, R. W. 79. From 

 anogqs, star (or from its radical), with 

 a prefix of which the significance is not 

 clear [or from muiinijh, island (?).] 



*munnaonk, n. the throat, C. (?) Cf. 

 iHfmajuaij. 



*inunnawhatteaug (Narr.), "a fish 

 somewhat like a herring," R. W. 

 Probably Alosa menhaden, 3Iitch.,the 

 'bony fish', 'hard head', or 'mun- 

 haden' of the fishermen; called also 

 in the northern jmrts of New England, 

 pauhagen. Both names have reference 

 to the use of this and otlicr species of 

 herring as fertilizers; rniiiiiinhiinnlilKvi, 

 he manures or enriches the earth, and 

 Abn. " pakkikkann, on engraisse la 

 terre," whence "pSkangan, petit pois- 

 son." 



munnequomin, n. corn or grain when 

 growing or in the tield, Hos. 14, 7; pi. 

 -minneajih, -munneash, green earsof corn, 

 Lev. 2, 14. (Cf. missunkquaminneash, 

 -mwnash, ftill ears, ears of com, Gen. 

 41, 5, 7, 22.) [Manured corn (?).] 



*inunnog's, bowels, C. See menogkus. 



muunoh, n. an island. Acts 28, 1; Rev. 

 (), 14; with the locative affix, 'inunnoh- 

 hannit (menoli-, munnah-) , to, at, or on 

 the island, Acts 13, 6; 27, 26; 28, 7, 9, 

 11; pi. -dhhanash, Ps. 97, 1; Is. 41, 5. 

 Adj. and adv. munnuh-lunuie, iif an is- 

 land. Is. 13, 22; 34, 14. 



[Abn. menafian, lie; -luaiSk, dans 

 I'ile. Chip, min is, riw niss. Menom. 

 may nainsh. Shawn, mei) n thl'f. Del. 

 mun cLh Idhe, Sch. ii, 402, 47-i; nw na hi/ 

 (and -te u), Zei.sb.] 



munnohquohteau, v. t. he enriches the 

 land, fei'tilizes, manures; pajeh munnd- 

 quohteiian, until I dung it, Luke 13, 8. 



munndntam. Seemanonlam, hesmellsit. 



*niunnucks (Narr.), the brant goose 

 (Anser hernia); pi. -suck, R. W. 



[Peq. a'kobyeeze, brants. Stiles. Mass. 

 menuks, a brant, C] 



*munnuimug (Xarr. ), milk. See me/tm- 

 nunk. 



munumulikemco, v. i. it rushes (makes 

 a rushing sound?); suppos. inan. subj. 

 iiKDnniiidikemmuk, when there isarush- 

 ing ( of mighty waters). Is. 17, 12. Vbl. 

 n. nmnnmuhbujuk, a rushing, ibid. 



