TErMBlTLL] 



NATICK-KNGLISH DICTIONARY 



147 



see — continued. 



29, 30, (of drinkj Ho?. 4, IS. C'f. suMjke, 

 it is hard, difficult. 



[Cree shn sm, he is sour or salt; s(- 

 vappwooy, sour liquor, i. e. vinegar. 

 Chip. (St Marys) she wun, (Sag. ) seeivan. 

 Menom. shwjwon. Del. shu won, Sch. ii, 

 478; xchiron, Zeisb.Voc.fi.] 



seep. See -vpu, a river. 



seepsin, sepsin, v. i. (he extends him- 

 self,) he lies down, Buth .3, 7; Jonah 1, 

 ■5; imperat. 2d sing, sepsinh, lie down; 

 suppos. se}}sinon, when I lie down. Job 

 7, 4. 



[Abu. mi'isadSbiii (etendn) or .mii- 

 sdlS. Del. mpsin, to be naked; xopsu, 

 he is naked (?), Zeisb.] 



*seg'auo (Narr. ), a widower, R. W. See 

 sekousq. 



[Del. schihuiral: (pi. I, widowers, 

 Zeisb.] 



segenam, v. i. he is indolent, slothful. 

 More common in the freq. and intens. 

 sesegenam, he is habitually idle, lazy: 

 nag gesegenamwog, they are idle, Ex. 

 5, 8. Cf. with ahque segenamoak; be not 

 slothful or remiss ( in a particular mat- 

 ter), Judg. 18, 9; ahqi-tt' seaegenammk, be 

 not slothful (by habit), Rom. 12, 11. 

 Adj. and adv. -amife, Prov. 10, 4; Matt. 

 20, o, 6. Vbl. n. segeneamoaonk, and 

 saseg- (gdsekeneanmonk, C. ) , slothf ul- 

 ness, idleness. 



[Narr. kus-sdsaqus, you are slow. 

 Abn. akSahik, le dernier (?) , or me' glare, 

 'il n'est pas ceinture, 11 va a la negli- 

 gence'.] 



seip. See sepu. 



sexppog' \,seepog'], n. 'salt water', James 

 3, 12. Elsewhere in Eliot's translation 

 the English word 'salt' is transferred. 



sekeneam, sekenam, v. t. (1) he re- 

 fuses, rejects; (2) he manifests aversion 

 to; (3)he hates (it), Gen. 37,35; Jer.31, 

 15; Prov. 13, 5. Suppos. >U)h sekenog, 

 he who refuses, hates, Prov. 15, 27. 

 With an. obj. sekeneau, he refuses, 

 rejects, hates (him), Gen. 27, 41: nus- 

 sekeneau, I hate him, 1 K. 22, 8; 2 Chr. 

 18, 7; suppos. noh sekeneait, pi. -itcheg, 

 they who hate (him) , Prov. 8, 36. 

 Vbl. n. act. sekeneaudonk, hating, 

 hatred felt, 2 Sam. 13, 15; sekeneausuonk. 



sekeneam, etc. — continued. 



hatred in exercise, active hatred; pass. 



nekeneadlaonk, -eoadtuonk, being hated; 



hatred received, Gen. 3, 15; Eccl. 9, 1; 



recipr.ormutual, sekeneniltuimk, enmity, 



mutual hatred, Prov. 10, 12. 



[Narr. sekineam, I have no mind to it; 



iiix-sekinmg, heUkes not me; sekinneau- 



luttaurk, they hate each other. Abn. 



nc-sigahdam, je ne le veiix pas. Del. 



srldnglnamen, to hate something; -</<ilri>iy 



he is hated, Zeisb.] 

 *sekoiit<i>wau, 'lisping' [he lisjis?], C. 

 sekousq [Uiv sekomqiid], n. a widow {se- 



kCuiishq, C. ); pi. -squaog, Lev. 21, 14; 



1 Tim. 5, 3: nen sekousq, I am a widow, 



2 Sam. 14, 5. As a verb, imperat. 2d 

 sing. sekousquaMi, be thou a widow. 

 Gen. 38, 11. From asiihkaa (she comes 

 after) or sequnau (she is left) and squd, 

 a left woman, a relict. See sequnau. 



[Narr. segauo, widower; segm'isquatv, 

 widow. Del. schikochquen, Zeisb.] 



sedhham. See seahham. 



Sep, a river. See stpu. 



sepagenum, sepak-, sepagk-, v. t. he 

 spreads out, extends (it), 2 Sam. 17, 19; 

 Ps. 105, 39. .Suppos. noh sepagenuk, he 

 who spreads, extends. Adj. sepagen- 

 timire, extended, spread out, Jer. 10, 9. 



sepaghunk, n. a sail. Acts 27, 40 (sepak- 

 liiud', C. ). Suppos. inan. of sepngkeu, 

 it spreads, that which extends or is 

 extended. See *seppagham. 



[Narr. iepdkehig, a sail; sepagehom- 

 maula, let us sail. Abn. ne-sibi'ghihima, 

 je vas a la voile.] 



sepagkeii (pi. -eog), v. i. they extend, 

 spread (themselves), 2 Sam. 5, 18; 1 

 Chr. 14, 13. Pass. inan. sepagkemco, 

 sepakemo), it is spread, it si^reads, ex- 

 tends. Suppos. sepakemcouk, if it be 

 spread (as leprosy, Lev. 13, 22, 27). 



sepakehtamoonk, n. the firmament. 

 Gen. 1, 7. (This verbal, from a form 

 sepitkilitiiiii, was perhaps formed by 

 Eliot.) 



sepakenum. See sepagrnnm. 



sepe, (it spreads out, extends; hence) it 

 is long, a long time, Josh, fi, 5; Matt. 

 23, 14; 'a good while'. Gen. 46, 29: 

 sepe mahche, long after. Josh. 23, 1. 

 Cf. qunni; sesekeu. (Cf. Greek tSitd-eiy, 



