TBIMEULI.J 



NATICK-EKGLISH DICTIONARY 



117 



panno3wau — continued. 

 pann(Bvrieii-i)i, a Vi-di: Vrom jxutiii^, and 

 nojii'aii, he sjieaks. 



pannu. See ihiiiih-. 



panuppu, panuppe, thrciuj.'hout, thor- 

 oughly; as V. i. paiiUji/M iramr, [he) is 

 through all, Eph. i, 6; prep., Rom. 1,8; 

 adv.. Gen. 11, 3; Rom. 15, 19; intens. 

 }>iip(iniiuppe, throughout, 2 t-hr. 34, 7; 

 wholly, Jer. 2, 20. 



[Abn. papanmiSi, 'par tout'.] 



panupwushati, v. t. he goes through- 

 out: jiininpii'Hshaoij otanauli, 'they went 

 through the cities', Luke 9, 6; 2 Chr. 

 It!, 9 ( paiumpshdnat hehtoh kali, ohke, 

 'to compass sea and land', C. ; but 

 l;iip-pannupwnsln>ne(iii, etc., 'you com- 

 pass', etc.. Matt. 23, Lt). From jinii- 

 iippi-t. 



papadtinunk, n. coll. tine rain, 'show- 

 ers', Dent. 32, 2. See padlippasldn. 



papahtantam, v. i. and t. inan. he trusts. 

 See pahalit<iiii(iii. 



papamompag'iii, freq. of piunoiiiiKniiii 

 (4. V. ), it creeps. 



papamootacheg', part. ]il. 'creeping 

 things', Ps. 148, 10. 



papanne, adv. 'safely', Prov. 31, 11 (?) 

 (papain', 'wholesome', C.):pa}xinfkuh- 

 hinncaslsh, mark thou well, Job 33, 31. 



papannoowau, v. i. he flatters; guppos. 

 itoli papKiimrrjitt, lie who flatters, Prov. 

 28, 23. Adj. and adv. papaiiae, flatter- 

 ingly, Prov. 26, 28. 



papaquanne, papuk-, adv. 'utterly', 

 ■thoroughly-, .Tudg. l.j, 2; Is. 40, 30; 

 Nah. 1, 8; Zech. 14, 11. 



papaslipe, prep. (?) through: inimUam 

 pajMslipe mahlokqs-ut, he shines through 

 the cloud, Job 22, 13. By redupl. from 

 peshau, it breaks through. Cf. nepiiuz 

 pdnphlidM, the sun rises. 



papaskhas, n. the 'swallow', I's. 84, 3; 

 lint cf. iiiiiini'csasliqiii'S. 



papasku. See pdplske, double. 



papaume, prep, concerning, with respect 

 to, of. 



papeasik, suppc». part. inan. when (it 

 is) very small, a very small thing; pi. 

 papeajtikish, 'small things', Zech. 4, 10; 

 Acts 26, 22. See pedsin. 



papeissit, pi. -Hcheg; suppos. part. an. 

 very small (persons), very young, Esth. 

 3,13. Intens. of ;K'/.'i.si.wi( ((|. v. ). From 



papeissit — continuetl. 



papaxxeitii has come the curniiUcd form 

 'jiiipuiivf' {lA.'papoosi's' I. a young child. 

 [Narr. yu cuppapponx, is tliis yciur 

 child?; papobs, a child; iii/i/u'ijun'x, my 

 child, R.W. Peq. poappunx, 'an infant 

 iicw-li(.>nr, Stiles.] 



papekq, n. a flea, 1 Sam. 24, 14; 26, 20 

 {poppek, C. ). Cf. palipoltkniiiaii. 



[Abn. hahikS, puce; habu, ciron dans 

 les mains, etc.; pS'kSc, vers dans la 

 chair, sur viande. Del. acliji'<jiiiik ( pi. ), 

 fleas, Zeis!).] 



papenuppashunk, n. a drop' ('in the 

 bucket'. Is. 40, 2). [Is it a noun col- 

 lective from pa (pcaii-i') and iin/iji,'. ' very 

 little water'?] Cf. paitli/>i>-'islilii. 



papesukaeu, v. i. or a<lv. it i^ twiliLdit; 

 ill the twiliglit. Kzek. 12, 6. 



papisiswaonk (?), vlil. 11. 'niirth', fun, 

 Man. Pom. 86. 



[Chip, pau'pf, he laughs. ] 



papiske, papasku, papske, v. i. it is 

 (loulile: adj. iloulile. F>y redupl. from 

 pitsktu (there is) double: jiixkiiniiiin-ojk 

 jidjnske ncyaiuiiuj . . ., 'doulile unto 

 her double, according to . . .', Rev. 

 18, 6; papskf ahtdonk, a double portion, 

 Dent. 21, 17. Sometimes with nef»it 

 (twice), as nceslt. plskeu (for jidpiskn) 

 CiadlehU'nii, he pays double, I'^x. 22, 4, 7. 



pdpiuhsuke, adv. one against the other, 

 reciprocally opposite, 1 K. "20, 29; Num. 

 8, 2, 3. Bv redupl. intens. from pinli- 

 .»A-,M,|. v.i. 



papokquog, Mippos. as 11. a cleft; jil. 

 -yixh, Aiiios 6, 11. From /Kjlijiolujiii, 

 augm. oi jiiiIkjuI, it breaks, opens. See 

 pannipxkodtnt. 



papomushau, papomshau, v. i. lie jour- 

 neys, continues walking, Acts 10, 38 

 (papauiiiiisliaii, Matt. 9, :!."i). Free), of 

 poniKtihaii (ij. v.). 



*papoiiauinsu, pi. j of/ (Narr. i, n. "a 

 winter fish which comes up iii the 

 brooks and rivulets; some call them 

 frost fish," etc., R. W. 10.5. The 'tom- 

 cod' or 'frost-fish' of the markets 

 (Gadus [Morrhua] tomcodus, Mitch.). 

 Tacaud, the specific name given by Cu- 

 vier, may lie from lohkoi (Narr. lahkl), 

 'when it is cold', 'cold-weather fish', or 

 Narr. fa</i(<iWi;(, frost, it is frozen, 'fro.st- 

 fish', but certainly does not signify 



