NATICK-ENGLLSH DICTIONARY 



149 



sequttahwhau, v. t. he remain!' (of a 

 number), lie i.s left, of (them), Deut. 

 3, 11. Otherwise written ashqueht-, 

 asqueteah-, asqut-, mhqueht-, etc. Sup- 

 pos. pi. neff sequttahwhutcheg, they who 

 are left of, the remnant of, Deut. .3, 11 

 (asqiitldlnnitcluy, 1 K. 9, 21). 

 sequtteaumuk, ashqueteamuk, i)ass. 

 suppos. inan., that whieh is left, the 

 remnant; pi. ^ Ish, the leavings, Ex. 

 12, 10; Matt. 15, 37. 

 sesegenam, v. i. lie is habitually idle, 



.slothful; freq. of seyenum, q. v. 

 sesegk. See sesSkq. 

 [sesekeu, v. i. he stretches himself (in 

 bed or when lying down) :] matta woh 

 wuUit sesekein, he can not stretch him- 

 self thereon. Is. 2S, 20. Cf. sesepdeu, 

 he stretrhes himself land remains 

 stretcheil). 



[Abn. lu'-sasaglu'sin, 'je m'etens, 

 etant couche'. Del. schucliachgeu, 

 straight along, Zei.sb.] 

 sesekq, sesegk, n. a venomous serpent, 

 •adder', tien. 49, 17; Pro v. 23, 32; 

 'viper', Acts 28, 3; pi. -qudog. Per- 

 haps this name was applied by the 

 Indian.s only to the rattlesnake, and 

 is onomatopoetic. Cf . sesekco, ' he jieeps ' 

 (as a bird). Is. 10, 14; sausauag (sup- 

 pos. ), when it ' tinkles ', 1 Cor. 13, 1 ; and 

 cf. a.ikmk, snake; queqnssK, he 'hisses'. 

 (Cf. Greek diZsi; Tonga, sisi; Polish, 

 hszi/k, to hiss. ) 



[Narr. .ihek, rattlesnake, R. W.; 

 seasicke, Wood. Abn. sisikSe, serpent a 

 sonnettes; SsigSimi, la sonnette; sessegS, 

 il orache.] 

 *sesep, qunusseps, n. a duck, C. See 

 *quequecum. This name perhaps signi- 

 fies a diver. [Cf. Abn. twtsapi, 'je me 

 plonge dans I'eau'; 3d pers. tmmpS, 

 from which freq. lai^-tsaSapS or Ise-tsapS 

 would be regularly formed.*] 



[*NuTE.— Murkert " rioubtful " in tlip mar- 

 gin."] 



[Cree seeseep, pi. ~nk. Chip, .ihee- 

 sheep, pi. ~ug.^ 

 sesepaeu, v. i. he stretches himself, 

 2 K. 4, 34; suppos. noh sesepanet, he 

 who stretches himself; pi. nag sene.paue- 

 cheg, Amos 6, 7. From itepe {sepAeit, he 

 extends), with augm. reduplication. 



sesepaeu — continued. 



Cf. hiu-en; mpsin; sesekeu. (Sansk. .i!., 

 jacere, dormire; snap, dormire, jacere; 

 smjjiia, somnium. ) 

 shehteaeu [for ntuhefilni,,,], n. agent, a 



murderer. 

 shpun-au. See uspunwidndl. 

 shuog, for nisliiuig, an. ].l. three, ,Ier. 



36, 23. See nlsliire. 

 shwe, pi. inan. .«lnr:„a.-<h, for nislui'cash, 



iii.tliiriiiasJi, three. 

 shwinchag, for ni.ihirincha;!, thirty, 



Xiiiii. 31, 44, 45. 

 shwosuk tahshe, num. eight. El. (ir. 

 14; pi. inan. shwo.Kuk l<il,sliin<ish; an. 

 shwosuk tah.fuog. Gen. 8, 23: shwosuk 

 lahshishquanogkod, eight cubits (meas- 

 ures of length), Ezek. 40, 9; shwosuk 

 avdtah.'ihikquinapit, (when) eight days 

 old, Gen. 17, 12; //(^('w.f/oco.s-x^-, eighteen; 

 .s/,/r„x»/.- u,li.-<li:nrl,ay, eighty; pi. an. 

 s-hinjsiik liilixliiiihidtoy; inan. shuvsuk 

 talishinkodtash. Otherwise written nUi- 

 wosuk, from n'shwe ^ishwe), three, the 

 third finger of the second hand or 

 5+3. 



[Narr. sliuvsuck, eight; piuck-nahna 

 shu;6suck, eighteen; swoaxui-k la shin- 

 check, eighty, R. W. 41, 42. Abn. 

 ntsansek, eight. Old Alg. nissouassou, 

 eight, Lah. Cree swdss'ik, eight. Chip. 

 shoiix iir, eight; (Ojibwa) nish wds sivi. 

 Del. ,•/»/„.«■/,, Zeisb.] 

 siashkisashaii. See samhk-isaghaii. 

 *sickissuogr I Narr.), n. pi. clams, Mya 

 arenaria or long clam {sukklisriog, C). 

 Peq. sucksairaug, Stiles. For sohkissa or 

 suhkmu, he spits, squirts water. Adj. 

 V. from .tohkni, suhkon, he spits. See 

 sulikou. 

 sinnukkutchahlieau. See xminkkuh- 



kau. 

 siogke, it is hard, ditficult; as adv. .■<ioyke 

 iierhaii, 'she had hard labor', (ien. 35, 

 16, 17. Suppos. ne siogkok, si6gok, that 

 which is hard or difficult, 'a hard 

 thing', 2 K. 2, 10; pi. +;.,/,. Augm. 

 (suppos.) .la-xiogoklsh, (very) hard mat- 

 ters, Ex. 18, 26. Vbl. n. sioykeyeuonk, 

 a hard matter, a being-hard, ' hard say- 

 ing', John 6, 60. V. adj. an. slogkussu, 

 he is hard; kux-siogkus, thou art a hard 

 man. Matt. 25, 24. From .■<ee, sour (so, 



