TRUMBVLL] 



NATICK-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 



189 



•wehquog, suppns. l)lunt: )ni.%'<elichi(og 

 twhquofj, iron when it i:* l.>lunt, Eccl. 10, 

 10. 



[Del. loiqaon, (it is) blunt, not sharp, 

 Zeisb. Gr. 167.] 



*weliquohke [ivehque-ohke'], the end of 

 the earth ('uttermost part'), Mass. 

 Ps., Ps. 2, 8. See Jco/iAwK. 



wehquoshauonat, v. t. to go as far as: 

 wehquoshdug, they went as far as, Acts 

 11, 19. 



wehsue (?), adj. fat, Zeeli. 11, 10. See 

 ii-refi; iriinnoijqui:. 



wehtauog, ( his) ear. See mehtduog. 



wehwepetu, he is lame (from birth. 

 Acts 3, 2): loehwheepHu, he is a cripple, 

 Acts 14, 8. See ncochumivesu. 



-rtrein. See veen. 



weis. See wcrs. 



wek, week, n. (his) house, tent, or 

 dwelling, Ex. 20, 17; Prov. 14, 11: we 

 ponamum u'eek, he pitched his tent 

 there. Gen. 12, 8; ayimun icetu, he built 

 a house, 1 K. 6, 9. See loetu. 



[Del. vi kit, his house; ivik he, to 

 build a house; ici qiioam, house, Zeisb.] 



wekinasq, weekinashq, n. a reed. Is. 

 42, 3; (sugar) cane. Is. 43, 24: pi. 

 -\~uaBh, reeds. Is. 19, 6. Cf. mishashq. 

 Perhaps from )i;i'k and ashq {mi-oskeht), 

 house grass, with which the roofs of 

 the W'igwams were filled in or covered. 

 "Their houses are very little and 

 homely, being made w-ith small poles 

 pricked into the ground and so bended 

 and fastened at the tops, and on the 

 sides they are matted with boughs and 

 •covered on the roof with sedge and old 

 mats." — Higginson's N. E. Plantation, 

 ch. 12. "The meaner sort of wigwams 

 are covered with mats they make of a 

 kind of bulrush." — Gookin, 1 Mass. 

 Hist. Coll. I, 149. 



[Narr. loekinash, reed; pi. -}- quash, 

 R. W. 90.] 



*wekineauquat (Narr.), fair weather: 

 vekinnauquocks, when it is fair weather, 

 R. W. 81 (weekGhquat, fair weather; 

 roekeneankqiiat, warm weather, C. 158). 

 See *dnndhquat; tminnohquudt. 



Tvekinneat, v. i. to occupy or live in a 

 house, tent, or other dwelling place, 

 Prov. 21, 9: na weekean, when ye dwell 

 therein, Deut. 8, 12. See ueckiUamun 

 IrieaQ. 



wekinneat — continued. 



[Narr. tuckoivekin, where dwell you? 

 R. W. 29. Cree nrgeemayov , he tenteth 

 with him, Howse 22.] 



*weki-tippocat ( Narr. ) , ' it is a warm 

 night', R. W. 



wekitteaonk, n. a building, 2 Cor. 5, 1. 



*wekoh.tea (?), as interj. 'O brave', C. 

 234. 



■wekomonat. See vehkomonal. 



wekon. Sec n-i-ekon. 



*wek6nche, adv. commonly, C. 227. 

 [(!^uir. ni'ijiiiije, 'often'. Pier. .5.] 



wekshik. See irehqahik. 



wekuhkauoiiat, wekuhkonat, v. t. an. 

 to build a house for (another person, ^ 

 etc.), 2 Chr. 2, 3; 6, 7; or, as in Gen. 

 33, 17, vekikauau, ' he made booths for 

 (cattle)': ivekuhkon, he went on build- 

 ing, Neh. 4, 18; wekuhkau, build the 

 house for (of the Lord), 1 Chr. 22, 11; 

 nohpish neowekekunk, he who shall build 

 me a house, ibid. v. 10; kcowekekauu- 

 nimnanonut, to build thee a house, ibid. 

 29, 16. 



wematin, n. appel. a brother, 1 C^or. 5, 

 11; Mark 13, 12 (oowemuttiv, C. 162). 

 See weetuksquoh. 



[Narr. iiematittuock, 'they are broth- 

 ers', R. W. 45.] 



wenauwetu [ininne-irelul'l, adj. an. (is 

 or was) rich, 2 Sam. 12, 1; pi. -j-og, 

 Ruth 3, 10 [viumie wHu, a good house, 

 C. 170): iimiauvxiuen, -in (indef. and 

 general), any rich man, Prov. 28, 11. 

 "A winnaytue, that is a rich man, or 

 a man of estimation, next in degree 

 to a sachem or sagamore." — Morton's 

 N. E. Canaan, ch. 19. Cf. v:viineel>i-'r. 



wenauwetuonk, n. riches, Prov. 30, 8. 



*wenise (Narr. ), an olil woman; pi. weni- 

 suck, R. ^\^ 44. See kehclmqua. 



wenom-in (?), n. a grape: seane wenom, 

 the sour grape. Is. 18, 5. See min. 



[Del. (?) vi mi min, it is ripe, Zeisb. 

 Yoc] 



wenshaen, n. a beggar, one who begs, 

 Luke 16, 20, 22; obj. wenshahnih, 1 Sam. 

 2, S. 



wenshamauonat, v. t. to ask (alms) 

 from, (an. and inan. ) to ask for (alms) : 

 oairenshamuh ne teagtias, he asked an 

 alms (something) from them. Acts 3, 3. 

 See iceenshuniit. 



