TBUMBCLL] 



NATICK-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 



127 



pog'kesu — continued, 

 tive-aniniate'), as in Ps. 43: tohwhutch 

 pogkesean, why dost thou cast me off? 



[Abn. iKibilsiSi, 'loin de nous; a, 

 I'ecart'.] 

 pog-ketam, v. t. inan. he casts (it) away, 

 puts (it) from him {/lakctum, C): 

 iinp-p(,fjkfUi,ii, I cast off, 2 K. 23, 27; 

 inipcrat. jMy,-hi.sl,. cast thou (it) out, 

 Matt. 7, ■"); su|ip(is. jxu/keloff, when he 

 casts (it) off. 



[Narr. n'pakctaiii, I will ]iut her away; 



aquie paketash, do not put away; n'pa- 



kenaqun, I am put away, R. W. 126. 



(In the first two examples he has used 



the ina.n. pogkelam for the an.jiogkencm. ) 



Old Alg. packihin, I abandon or forsake, 



Lah. Abn. tie-baghUamm, j'abandonne 



eela. Del. pakiton, he throws (it) 



away.] 



pogkodantam. See pakodtamtan. 



pog-kohham. See poggohham. 



pog-komunk, n. a rod, a stick (carried in 



the liand 1, Ex. 21, 20; Prov. 29, 15: pog- 



koinaiikipiuiik, a stake. Is. .54, 2; -7?iM/i- 



quonk, a pillar. Gen. 28, 18, 22; 31, 45. 



[Cree puckamoggun, a club or cudgel, 



Howse.] 



pogkussu, V. i. act. an. he drops, falls 



(as an inan. body, or without external 



cause. See peniislmu); suppos. homin 



■woh pogkussit, 'whoever shall fall', 



Matt. 21, 44. AVith inan. subj. pogk- 



ishm{ni), it falls; pi. -iieash, Nah. 1, 12; 



suppos. ne pogshuuk, it (when) falling. 



Is. 34,4. See pirohkelichtiaii. 



[Cree jMlikeKtn, he falls (as in walk- 

 ing), Howse 80. Alg. pafigiKln, il tombe 

 (un objet inan. ).] 

 pohchanutch, -nitch., n. a linger; 3d 

 pers. ujijKili-. his finger. Y. subst. pah- 

 chanilchiiH, he has fingers (is fingered), 

 2 Sam. 21, 20. From pohshe, divided, 

 and -miich {menutcheg) , hand. Cf. 

 pmhchmit, toe, from pohshe and -sit, foot. 

 *polichatuk, ])!. +qu1nmh, a bough, C. 



See/-o/.-.?/,a». 

 pdhchau, v. i. he turns aside, ileviates. 



i^ve jiiilirhau. 

 pohkeai, -nai, v. i. it is dark; adj. dark; 

 n. darkness, Gen. 15, 17; Is. 5, 20; 45, 7; 

 Amos 5, 18: pohken-ahtu, in darkness, 

 Eccl. 2, 14. Adv. and adj. pokenae, 

 darkly, obscurely, Job 22, 13; 1 Cor. 



pohkeni, -nai — continued. 



13, 12. Intens. pohpohkeni, .lob 24, 15. 

 Related to pohki, clear, open, as Incus 

 to lucendo, etc. See paupak'inanik; pi'ig- 

 ketium; cf. kuppogki. 



[Narr. pnukiinmim, dark, R.W. Abn. 

 pekenem, pekeneghe. Del. pdckemun, very 

 dark, Hkw.] 

 pohkenittipukook [ pohken i-tipiikwk] , 

 'in the dark night', Prov. 7, 9. See 

 *tuppaco. 



[Xarr. poppakunndch, 'dark night' 

 { = P'i-pohkcnil, when it is verv dark), 

 R.W.] 

 pohki, pahke, v. i. (1) it is clear, trans- 

 parent, that may be seen tlirough, 

 pervious, Rev. 21, 11, 18. (2) Adj. <'lean, 

 pure. Lev. 11, .36; Prov. 30, 5; Ps. 51, 

 10. As adv. pnkke (and pohkiyen, C. ), 

 clearly, plainly. Suppos. inan. pohkok, 

 when it is clear; hence, the (clear) 

 sky, Matt. 16, 2, 3; Ps. 77, 17; and poh- 

 kohqnodt, when clear, in clear weather, 

 a clear day. (Cotton has pahke and 

 jmhkiiieu, 'dearly'; pohkoiyt-ve, 'clean'; 

 pahkeyeite, 'cleanlily '. ) See poliqiiiu; 

 open, manifest. 



The three roots, pohk, (pdk), pohq 

 (p6gh), pohiih {pdsh or pdj), have all 

 the same ultimate base, with the idea 

 of division or separation into parts. 

 2)ohq- and its derivatives denote the 

 act of separating (breaking, opening, 

 beating out, etc.); pohsh-, the fact of 

 division or partition {pohshe, half, jiart 

 of, etc.), and pohk {pohki, pahke) the 

 result of sejiaration, openness, per- 

 viousness, a going through. [Cf. Tamil 

 pag-v, to divide, to share; jior, to cleave; 

 pdl, a part, a portion; piang-u, a share, 

 Caldw. 446, 475. Sansk. 6/ia(/, dividere; 

 hhug, dividere, distribuere; hhd'ga, jiai-s, 

 portio; hhaiig, frangere; pakshci, latus, 

 dimidia pars mensis. These groups 

 of derivatives from a common root 

 correspond nearly with English (and 

 Anglo-Saxon) words beginning with 

 thr: thorough, through, throw ( = to- 

 through, A. S. thrawan), thrust, thrash 

 (A. S. ihersc-an), threshold (A. S. 

 Ihersc-el, IhrasM-wald), thread, throat, 

 throttle, thrill (A.-S. (/i;w«(/,i,aiid drill, 

 etc. ] 



[Xarr. pdiiqiti, pduquaquat, Mt liolds 



