84 



BUREAr OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGi' 



BVI.I.ETIN 2o 



ne naj, let that be so, si> he it. See nan. 

 [^iirr. enntch oreridtcli kehi anawayean, 



[let it be as yon (•ommand,] 'your will 



shall bf law.'] 

 nenan, the same ( thinjj; I, Phil. 2, 2. See 



iiatt. 

 ne nogque, 'that waj-wani', El. tin 21; 



toward that. See nogque. 

 *nencDhque, adv. so, C. Cf. aiirjjhqin'. 



See,/..,'/7i". 

 nepattuhquonk. See neepatlnnkqiKink . 

 nepaus, -pauz, n. (1) the sun, Gen. 19, 23; 



87,9; .Josh. 10, 12, 13; Ps. 89, 36. (2) 



a month, Ex. 12, 2; Kev. 22, 2; pi. (an.) 



-:aog, -zmog: neesvog nepauzaog, two 



months, Judg. 11, 37. Cf. keituk, »(n)f- 



paushadl. 



[Narr. nippaiiw, -pdwus, the sun; 



paiisiick npauuK, one month. Abn. 



k-izSi!, le soleil; nibadSsse, il ^claire, il 



iiiarche.] 

 nepauzshad, n. the moon. See ncwe- 



p„„sh,„l,. 



nepeunk, n. a l)ush, Ex. 3, 2, 3; vt ne- 

 2X-vnkqitini}it. in a bush, Acts 7, 30; Luke 

 20, 37. 



nepun, :i. (the latter part of) summer. 

 Gen. 8, 22; Jer. 8, 20. Cf. sequan. "The 

 earing of their corn [the Virginians 

 call] nepmough, the harvest and fall of 

 the leaf, tnquitock." — Capt. J. Smith's 

 Virginia, b. 2, p. 28. Adv. and adj. ne- 

 piinii6e, in or of summer. 



[JJarr. neepun and quaqusquan, sum- 

 mer. Abn. nipene, I'ete pass6; nipen, 

 r^t4 present; nlpeghe, I'^t^ prochain; 

 m;)«i/,S/, pendant I'et^. Creeji^m; sup- 

 pos. II t'peek. Chip. Ji<"'Wn. Del. ni pen, 

 Zeisb. Cf. Abn. mibi, leaf. Lescarbot 

 gives Souriquois [Micmac] nibir betom; 

 when spring comes; lit. when the leaf 

 comes, p. 697 (repr. in, 671). 



*nequitteconnau-og' (Narr. ), n. pi. eels, 

 R. W. [literally, 'they go one l>y one', 

 or 'singly', i. e., are not seen in pairs. 

 Cf. neeshriuog; and see Narr. Club ed. 

 of Williams' Key, note 2.51]; nequttika, 

 an eel, C. 



nequt, num. one. El. Gr. 1-t (.see Piek- 

 ei'ing's Notes, xliv-xlvi): nequtta ttiJiKht' 

 (l-ro), six. Job 5, 19; nequtta tah,'<hin- 

 chag, sixty, 2 Sam. 2, 31. Cotton makes 

 this distinction between nequt and pnsiik 

 (q.v.): "neqiil, a thing that is past: 



nequt — continued. 

 piisiik, athing in being," whicli, though 

 ni.it absolutely correct, is perhaps ety- 

 mologically well founded. Xeqnt ap- 

 pears to be nearly related to negonne, 

 first in order, and to nukkone (another 

 form of the same word), old, or left 

 behind; perhaps also to nekbi, it is born 

 or begins to be. The primary mean- 

 ing is that which begins a series: one, 

 as a beginning of numeration, while 

 pamk signifies one by itself, a unit. 



[Narr. nquii. Peq. nuqin'd, Stiles. 

 Abn. phekS, one; nekSdaiiii, six; negSda- 

 'legSe, one hundred, etc. ; nekStsi^i, 

 uniquement. Micm. nekSI. nn, une fois; 

 adv. seulement, Easles.] 



nequtctippai, n. the portion or share of 

 one person, a share, a part, Prov. 17, 2. 

 From ni-ijiit and rliippr. 



nequttekesukquashonat, (infinit. as) 



n. one day's journey : "" , he goes 



on one day's journey, 1 K. 19, 4. 



[Narr. nqnittakeesiquockat, one day's 

 walk.] 



ne-sahteag, as n. its length (see sohteaii, 

 it extends): at'iaeu nemhteag, on its two 

 ends, i. e. on the two sides long-wise, 

 Ex. 25, 19. 



nesausuk, num. seven, Mark 8, 5; usually 

 with tahshe or adtahshe: nesausuk taltahe, 

 seven, Ezek. 45, 23; an. pi. -tahmiog, 

 ibid. 



[Peq. nezzAugnsk, Stiles. Narr. cnadn. 

 Abn. tanbaSans. Cree neeshwdsslk or 

 thjpuckoop. Chip, mju^dssvn. Bar. ; nizh- 

 irassiri. Del. ni schasch, Zeisb.] 



nesnechag. See neesneMuig. 



netassu, v. adj. (as n. ) a domestic ani- 

 mal; pi. netassuog, 'cattle'. Gen. 6,20; 

 Ps. 148, 10 (netas, C. ). From neefv and 

 (the base of) assamai'i, he feeds him: 

 house-fed animals. 



[Narr. netasuog, cattle; "this name 

 the Indians give to tame beasts, yea, 

 and birds also which they keep tame 

 aliout their houses." — R. W. 95.] 



netatup, -ppe, adv. like, so. El. Gr. 22; 



Luke 22, 31 ; in such manner, Matt. 5, 



12; neane, . . . nelatuppe, as . . . so, 



Prov. 26, 21. For ne tatuppe, it is equal. 



[Narr. netdtup, 'it is all one.'] 



neteag [ = ne teag] , this or that thing: ycu 

 jiiohsag neteag. 'this great thing' (mat- 



