NATICK-ENGLISH BICTIONARY 



91 



ncoche — continued. 



began to mock him, Lulie 1-i, 30, 29; 

 yeu nujche uxxi-uaout, tliis they began 

 to do. [matta ncoche peyoh, 'lam not 

 come', Matt, 9, 13; nmchi Jchorah, 'I 

 am the Lord's' (i. e. I proceed from 

 the Lord), Is. 44, 5, in which places 

 ncoche is perhaps used for nen mch.] 

 See tdhnwche, causelessly, ' in vain ', and 

 hitche. 



[Del. nutschi, at the beginnina, Zeisl). 

 Gr. 177.] 

 *noochuni, I blame; from vutchumonate, 



to blame, ('. 1S2. 

 ncDchumwesuonk, n. tenderne.ss, weak- 

 ness, Dent. 28, .56. 

 ncDchumwetancDwaonk, n oj c h u m - 

 wehtahwhuttuonk, n. a wound; j)l. 

 -ijiigash, Prov. 26, 22; 27, 6. 

 nGDchumwi, adj. weak (El. Gr. 13), Num. 

 13, 19; ]5rimarily, weak, because in its 

 beginning (from ncoche): ncochumn-e 



mmnepog, moskehtue, the tender 



herb, Deut. 32, 2; Job 28, 27; pi. nm- 

 chumwiyeuash; an. ncochuimresu, (he is) 

 weak (El. Gr. 13), tender. Gen. 33, 13; 

 1 Chr. 22, 5; iwh ncochmmresit, he that 

 is tender, Deut. 28, 54, 56; he that is 

 lame, Prov. 26, 7; pi. Matt. 11, 5 {nm- 

 chtmwe, maimed, C. 172; nmchimuii, 

 tender, ibid. 175; noocMmooe, weak, ibid 

 176). 

 [ncodsquaonat, v. act. an. to seduce, to 

 commit fornication with:] ncodxquao- 

 nont, 'seducing', Ex. 22, 16. See nan- 

 vmnncodsqimaii. 

 *ncohchuniwesue, adv. weakly, C. 2.30. 

 ncDhki, ii03kiyeue, adj. soft, Prov. 25, 

 15; Job 41, 3; pi. inan. ncokkiyeuash, 

 Ps. 55, 21; an. ncohkem, tender (soft, 

 a.s a yomig animal). Gen. 18, 7 (nooh- 

 keshakatmsh, soft wool, C. 175; noohkie 

 monag, limber cloth, ibid. 172). 

 noohkik [that which is softened or made 

 soft]: "Xocake, as they call it, which 

 is nothing but Indian corn parched in 

 the hot ashes; the ashes being .sifted 

 from it, it is afterwards beat to pow- 

 der."— Wood. It is used by Eliot for 

 'meal' (1 Chr. 12, 40), 'fiour' (Lev. 

 2, 4, 5, 7; 24, 5), and 'ground corn' 

 (2 Sam. 17, 19). natkhikanehteush, 



nashkik — continued. 



'grind thou meal'. Is. 47, 2.] See 

 nanahkineg; 'ininrKjhkiiiiium. 



[Marginal note.—" From ii word which 

 means 'to .sift', siftefi. Cf. sieve. From 



[Narr. "ndir/iirf, parched meal, . . . 

 which they eat with a little water, hot 

 or cold", R. W. 33; pishquehirk, un- 

 parched meal, p. 36. Del. lo-cal, flour, 

 meal, Zeist). Voc. 9 (cf. lo ka hel la, to 

 let it drop, p. 44).] 

 noohqueu, noohque [no vliquueu. See 

 no; ndcosukomunneat]: unncohrjueu, so 

 far as, at such a distance, Acts, 28, 15; 

 na noohque, so far distant, Ps. 103, 12; 

 wussaume ndohk, if it be too far dis- 

 tant, 'if the way be too long for thee', 

 Deut. 14, 24 (uttoh unnuhkUhquat, how 

 far? C. 228). Cf. ancohqite; nuhquainat; 

 wehque. 



[Narr. tou nuckquaque, how far? R. AV! 

 72 (how- much, 137) ; lou aniickquaque, 

 how big?; yb aniickquaque, so far, ibid.] 

 ncokeontamunat, v. t. to descend to or 

 upon: ncokeontam, (he) came down 

 (upon the mount), Ex. 19, 20; wunnm- 

 keontamun, he descended on (it), Ex. 

 19, 18; ncokontauoog, they descended 

 (upon it, i. e. a ladder). Gen. 28, 12. 

 ncDkinat, v. i. to descend, to go down: 

 ncokeu, he descended, Ex. 34, 5; (from 

 heaven) Matt. 28, 2; she went down, 

 Gen. 24, 16; ncokcop, he descended 

 (pret. ), Eph. 4, 9; nconcokeog, they shall 

 descend, John 1,51; ncach nmkemkeguk- 

 qut, 'I came down from heaven', John 

 6, 38; noh ricokit, he who descends, or 

 descended, Ps. 133, 3; Eph. 4, 10; noa- 

 kemo, -ma>, (pass. ) it was let down, Acts 

 10, 11; 11, 5; Rev. 21, 10; noakitch, let 

 him descend or come down, Mark 15, 

 32; ncokinuk wunnutchegash, when he 

 let down his hands, Ex. 17, 11. From 

 ncokinwn. 



[Del. nahik, nahiwi, down, below; 

 (whence) nahoochu-en , to go down or 

 below, Zeish. Gr. 180.] 

 nrokinumunat, v. t. to pull down, Jer. 

 18, 7; to lower (inan. obj.) with the 

 hand, to pull down; nmkinum, she let 

 it down. Gen. 24, 18; p>ii<h naokinnum- 

 u'og, they shall take (it) down, Num. 

 4, 5; na>kinnuma)k, 'raze it', Ps. 137, 7. 



