TKUMEULL] 



NATICK-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 



167 



tummuuk — foiitinueil. 



be sharjK' ami bnjad, witli which he 

 cuts downe trees as thicke as a man's 

 thigh, afterwards dividing them into 

 lengths," etc., Wood. See *amisque. 



[Narr. tummdck, pi. -j- gun Hog; (also) 

 noosup-pauog; sumhup-pmmj, R. W. 

 Abn. teina'kSe; le mille, atsimeslS, fem. 

 ncoehneskS. Del. fiimdque, Hkw.] 

 tummussum, v. t. he cuts off; as used 

 by Eliot it has the same signification as 

 tumiiifliiiim, q. v.* "Withan. obj.tammM.s- 

 sahwhau, with nearly the same signifi- 

 cation as lummehtahwhim. Freq. iad- 

 famswau wuhk-MsoJi, he cuts his nails, 

 Deut. 21, 12. 



[*Margixal Note.— "The difference is that 

 one is severed by repeated blows (-eliialmm), 

 the other by simple cutting {-usmm). See 

 Howse87 et seq." 



[Abn. iie-iemeseinen, ne-tciiii'iiSn, je le 

 coupe. ] 

 *tuniiock(Xarr. ), whither'.' Svv tnhiioh. 

 *tuppaco (Xarr. ), 'toward night': ok- \ 

 mat'ippijnd (suppos. ), 'toward night'; 

 rianashoira-tlppocal, midnight, R.W. 67. 

 Eliot does not employ this word in the 

 present or indicative, but lias its sup- 

 positive (tipukaA; -ok) in thecompounds 

 pohkeniuipukoak, 'in the darkness of the 

 night' (when it is dark night), Prov. 

 7, 9; pajeh noe-l ipukkok, till midnight 

 {iioiittipptilikoci, 'late at night', C); 

 nodiptikoddeu, at midnight, tuppaco 

 signifies it is dark, or the time of dark- 

 ness, and lias the same base with j>oh- 

 keni (q. v.), if not formed from it 

 directly by tlie prefix a<ll or vt (adf- 

 pohk-eni). 



lAhn. knmi edStsi iehi' kat , qwel temps 

 de nuit?; Iltebsksikebcm, la nuit (passee), 

 de tota nocte dicitur; is tehkSiSik, cette 

 nuit. Micm. tepkSnSgel, lune, mois. 

 Del. tpocu, Zeisb. and Hkw. Cree iib- 

 biskow, it is night. Chip. (St Marys) 

 Ub ik vd, (Gr. Trav.) lehik {fibik'ad, 

 Jiight, Bar.). Alg. tibikal, il est nuit.] 



*tuppanum, v. t. lie cares for [takes 

 care of (?)] it, Mass. Ps. See toJnrul- 

 lliilupdiuih. 

 tuppinohteau, tuttup- (fri'cj. ), v. i. he 

 tH-ists, he spins (caus. he makes to 

 turn around), Ex. 35, 25; neg. pi. 

 Luke 12, 27; Matt. 6, 28. From ttippln, 

 tuttuppin, it turns or winds (about ita 

 axis). Adj. and adv. luppeiioht/ie, spun 

 or twisted, Ex. 35, 25. See loliijijidi/in; 

 tdtuppe; tnUuppuii. 



[Abn. nc-d((trbabi'reineii, je dcvide, 

 je fais peloton.] 

 tuppuhquam-ash, n. pi. beans, 2 Sam. 

 17, 28; but "beam-ash" , Ezek. 4, 9; 

 lit. creepers, or twiners: iuppuhquamw, 

 'it winds about', twines. Probably 

 the Phaseolus vulgaris L. (common 

 pole bean), as manvsqussedash (bush 

 bean) is the var. nanus. See *maiin- 

 nqussed-a.sli . 



[Abn. a'l(},a'kSar, feves, fa.seoles; 

 da'lebakSnii'meii, il I'entortille. Mod. 

 Abn. ad-ba-kira, bean, Osunk.] 

 tuppuksin, V. i. he encamps, pitches 

 tenta (makes a ring); pi. -.wnwo^, they 

 encamp, 'pitch their tents', 'abide in 

 tents', Ex. 13, 20; Num. 9, 18, 22; 

 suppos. taubukkusxik, when he was en- 

 camped, Ex. 18, 5. y. t. an. luppuk- 

 sinehlauonat, to encamp against; y-iittup- 

 sinehtauouh, they encamped (against) 

 them, Judg. 6, 4. Vbl. n. -sinnmonk, a 

 camp. Num. 2, 3; Ps. 78, 28. 

 *tupsaas (IVii. ), a rabbit, Stiles. 

 tussoukquonk, n. a saw; pi. -mii/asli, 1 



Chr. 20, 3. See pokxunkqnoiik. 

 tuttuppinohteau. See luppljwhtcait. 

 tuttuppun, tatuppin, v. i. it turns or 

 winds itself about, it twines; as n. a 

 (spun or twisted) string, thread, cord, 

 Judg. 16, 9, Josh. 2, 21, =ti(ttiij,j,„, mah- 

 tog, V. 18, suppos. of tnltujqiiifJilmii, 

 q. V. 



[Abn. ati'pSrdkar, entortille. Cree 

 te-nj>pe-piilliii. it turns (<jn its axis); 

 idppee, a line, or cnrd.] 



