156 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



sukquiyeue, adj. and adv. in fine pow- 

 der, in small pieces. See sohqiii. 



sukqusha-og, v. i. they are broken, Dan. 

 11, 22. 



sukquttahham, v. t. he heats lit) small. 

 See siiliqiittubhani. 



*sumliup (Narr. ), n. pi. -^pai'iDij, hea- 

 vers, R. AV. 95. Cf. *iiinisque; *n6osHp; 

 iummunk. nSosup and »umhnp probably 

 correspond with Abn. nSse-meskS, the 

 female, and atfii-mi'skS, the male beit\'er. 



summag-unum, Bohm-, samogkin-, v. 

 t. he stretches forth, holds out (his 

 hand or something in or with his 

 hand). Is. 5, 25; Gen. 22, 10; Ex. 15, 12 

 {nus-summoglcinnitchaem, I stretch out 

 my hands, C. ). Suppos. summaglnnk, 

 when he held out (his hand. Josh. 8, 

 19). Pass, menutdieg )ie S(nno(jkmnk, 

 the hand which is held out. Is. 14, 26. 

 "With inan. subj. (v. i. ) summagohteau, 

 (his hand) is held out, Is. 14, 27. 

 With inan. ol>j. and an. ending, mim- 

 iituijiitiuiiiiintin, he holds out (his hand) 

 to or against (him). Is. 5, 25. From 

 xiili- and iiiagro (he gives, presents), 

 with formative {-num) denoting action 

 of the hand. 



sun is called by Eliot (Gr. 21) an 'adverb 

 of asking', signifying 'is it?': sunmi- 

 matta,, 'is it not?'; sun vmnnegen vmn- 

 nesen, is it well to do good? etc., Mark 

 3, 4; sun nen god, etc., am I a god? 2 

 K. 5, 7; simnamatia yen . . . , is not 

 this . . . ? Job 4, ti. 



[Cree iidli. Chip, iki.] 



sunkisq. See tnjuksq. 



sunk-squaw. See .s-ohA>(/. 



*sunnadm, nanummatiu (Narr.), the 

 mirth wind, K. W. Fmm soiranc-adt 

 {soiixin-it}, to or toward the south (?). 



*sunnuckliig (Narr.), a falling trap for 

 wolves, loaded ' with a great weight of 

 stones', R. W. 143; a crushing instru- 

 ment. From the same root with the 

 following words. 



*suniiucklug' — continued. 



[Del. »ill ki te he men, to squeeze close, 

 til press, Zeiab. (cf. achsiin-hHtehican, a, 

 steel trap (?), Zeisb.).] 



sunukehteau, sunugqueht-, sanuk-, 

 v. cans, he crushes (by a weight), he 

 causes to be crushed. Suppos. pass. 

 (inan.) iie-sanukehtarauk, that which is 

 crushed. Is. 59, 5. With an. obj. 

 -tahhemi, -taJnvhan., he crushes (him), 

 makes a weight to fall upon (him) ; stm- 

 tmyqiiftidivJuniiudii, fall (ye mountains) 

 on us, Luke 23, 30. The primary verb 

 (s«n«H-«t (?), it falls heavily, it op- 

 presses or presses down ) is not found 

 in Eliot. 



[Abn. nf-.vkkikk(imen, je le foule; ne- 

 Krkeki'iieiiieii, je le serre, mann; nr-segSs- 

 kikaSdii, je I'ecrase.] 



sunukkuhkau, sanuk-, v. t. he crushes 

 (him) (by a falling weight [Jiassun, 

 stone] is implied, or by force from 

 al)ove): nuK-sunvkkiihknk, he crushes 

 me, Jer. 51, 34. 



-sup. See -flip. 



*suppawn. See smijide. 



suppequash, n. pi. tears. See inits- 

 siippiy. 



sussequnnum, v. t. lie anoints (it). 

 Lev. 8, 10; t. an. siissiquniian, he anoints 

 (him): niis-sussequn, I anoint (him), 

 Ps. 89, 20. Vbl. n. sussequfonk, anoint- 

 ing, ointment, Prov. 27, 9, 16; Ex. 40, 

 15. Pass, -qunitiiionk, being anointed, 

 1 John 2, 27. Cf. .so/ifomMn, hepoursout. 

 [Cree sooskoomi, he is smooth; soos- 

 kivow, it is smooth.] 



sussippoeu, -poi, it is on one side of, on 

 the border nf: sumppoeu Lebanon, on 

 the side of Lebanon (Lebanon on-the- 

 side), Is. 37, 4; nequt sussippoi, . . . og- 

 komaev, on the one side, . . . on the 

 other, Ezek. 41, 2; .tussippoe squonl, 'the 

 sides of the door', ibid. 



sussipponkoniuk, n. the wall nf the 

 house, Ezek. 41, ti; 2 Chr. 3, 11; .lus- 

 supjivnkomiik, I^ev. 14, 37. 



