TRUMBrLLl 



NATICK-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 



133 



pcothonsh, -ansh — continueJ. 

 jiwIlnmcJoi, 'Imrket', Is. 40, 15; pmlhon- 

 clute nippe, a pitcher of water, Mark 

 14, 13. From paudlaii, he brings. Cf. 

 quomphunJc, a dipping instrument. 



[Abn. pulaiHsS, poOwitsS, 'espece de 

 cruehe d'ecorce, ronde en haut, pour 

 aller querir del'eau'; 2J<!keniiiilsS, 'une 

 antrf espece, plus longue que large'.] 



pcDtoemco, v. i. it swells, bulges, pro- 

 jects: pcoloemmuk, 'a swelling' (i. e. 

 when there is a bulging or protulier- 

 ance), as in a wall, Is. 30, 13. Vbl. n. 

 pcotdeonk, pl.-ongash, a swelling, 2 Cur. 

 12, 20. 



pootonkunau, v. t. : pcolonkundog iimt- 

 ithl(imp-euh, they bend (draw) their 

 bows, Ps. 64, 3; suppos. part, -kinont 

 {yil. -kitionclieg) ahtomp-eh, he (they) 

 who draws the bow. Is. 66, 19. See 

 irniikiiiiiiial: iruttunkinonat. 



*poDtouwaslia, break of day (?), C. 



pcotsai, as n. a corner, Prov. 7, 12 (a re- 

 cess, retired place ?): kishke up-pcot- 

 saau-com-ut, 'near her corner', v. 8; 

 ansh pcolsau-ut, go 'into thy closet'. 

 Matt. 6, 6. Cf. ut pcochoag, in a corner, 

 Prov. 21, 9, =adt pcochag, Prov. 2.5, 

 24. From pahchau, pdhchau, he goes 

 out of the way, turns aside (?). pcotsai 

 with inan. subj., jjcotman with an. subj. 

 [Del. jin tschcek, (in) 'the corner of a 

 n 10111 ', Zeisb.] 



poatuppog:, -pag, n. a bay. Josh. 1.5, 2, 

 5; 18,19. 



Chip. j)f'-lij-hiY/, pee-toe-hee, a bog, Scb. 

 II, 4(i2.] 



psukses, pi. — "(/, n. a little l)inl. El. 

 Or. 9; a bird, Eccl. 10, 20; Amos 3, 5. 

 This word is evidently a diminutive 

 from a noun psuk or psukissu, which I 

 do not find in Eliot. For the class 

 (aves) 'fowl' 'Eliot used puppinshaas-og, 

 q. V. [pahshc, half ~psukses, bird; cf. 

 i^ani-k. paksh'ui, avis —pakshd, latus, di- 

 midia pars. 



[Xarr. pussukesesuck (pi. ) , fowl. Abn. 

 sipsis, pi. xipsak, oiseaux.] 



ptooTjni, tcDwu, V. i. he moves in air, 

 flies (as a bird), 2 Sam. 22, 11; Ps. 18, 

 10; Prov. 6, 2; pi. jilcoweeog (pret. tco- 

 weep, he did fly, Mass. Ps., Ps. 18, 10); 

 suppos. noh ptmireet (or tooweet), that 

 which (an.) flies. Lev. 11, 20, 21. With 



ptoowu, toowu — continued, 

 inan. subj. ptcoeil, tmelX, it flies; pi. 

 pta)eog, Prov. 23, 5; suppos. (pukil) 

 ptoohog, (smoke) when it flies away, 

 drifts away, Ps. 68, 2. Adj. ptmioiche, 

 Prov. 26, 2. Cans. inan. (subj. and obj.) 

 ptooanaa, loohannau, it drives or causes 

 it to drift in air; pass, it is driven or 

 drifted; suppos. ne tmiinontog, ptioaimii- 

 tog {troannnUig, Mass. Ps. ), that which 

 is driven by the wind, Ps. 1, 4; .35, 5; 

 Hus. 13, 3. Adj. -adv. tmitmiolihiiiine, 

 driven, made to drift. Is. 41, 2. Nearly 

 allied to, if not formed directly from, 

 pmtaa, he blows, moves the air. (Cf. 

 Sanak. pat, (1) cadere; (2) volare (cf. 

 petau; petsh.au) ; Greek TTiffrto, TtETopai; 

 Lat. jitto. See Max ^liiller's Lect. (in) 

 on Darwin's Philos. of Lang., in Living 

 Age No. 1523, p. 424. ) 



[Narr. ptoice!, it is fled (of a bird), 

 R. W. 86. Old Alg. piouan, the wind 

 drives the snow, Arch. Amer. ii, 26. 

 Cree twdy-hoo, 'he alights himself (?), 

 as a bird'; peivun, it drifts.] 



*p'tuks (Quir.), 'timber' (for building), 

 Pier. 17; 'trees', ibid. 28; p'tnk, a tree, 

 ibid. 44. 



pu-. See p&. 



puhchuteaonk, 'deceit', Prov. 12, 20. 



-puhkuk. See muppulikuk, a head. 



pulipeg'k, n. an instrument of music, Ps. 

 144, 9; Is. 38, 20 (puhpeeg, a trumpet 

 or music, C. ). Suppos. (insti.) from 

 pulqiuhki, hollow. Cf. monopiihpi'g, a 

 trumpet, and see pummukau. 



[Powh. paicpecones, pipes, J. Smith. 

 Abn. hihiSan, trompette.] 



puhpequau, v. i. he sounds a trumpet 

 (Rev. 8, 7, 8), plays upon an instru- 

 ment of music. 



puiipequoii, -quoan, n. an instrument 

 of music; yX.^ash, Eccl. 2, S; Ps. 1.50, 

 4; Gren. 31, 27. From pulipiyiian, for 

 jviliperjuau-nn. 



[Abn. hihiSai'i, trompette. Del. a<:h 

 p)i qnan, flute, pipe, Zeisb.] 



*puhpu, V. i. he plays, C. ; pi. puhpuog. 

 See jioi'iij/ii. 



puhpuhki, puppulike, v. i. it is hollow; 

 adj. hollow, Ex. 27, 8. Augm. oi puk- 

 qui (q. V. ). Suppos. concr. pnihpuhkag, 

 a holloH-, Judg. 15, 19. See puppuh- 

 kohtrdi. 



