190 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



[BVLLETIN 25 



wenwe, weenwee, n. (his) navel, Job 

 40, 16: kenwtf, kcenire, thy navel, Cant. 

 7, 2; Ezek. 16, 4. See menu-ee (m'noe!). 



*wenygh ( Narr. 1, woman, Stiles; (Peq. ) 

 iii:liili:ir(ili, my wife, ibid. 



■wepamooe, wepamue, adj. of genera- 

 tion: iruskannem, semen virile. 



Lev. l.S, 16, 17, 18. 



wepamuwaonk. See ireepainoe. 



*wepe (occurs in chap, x.xii of Roger 

 ^\'illiams' Key, prefixed to an accusa- 

 tion, judgment, or sentence, or ad- 

 dressed to a delinquent): ivipe Imnnuh- 

 atmi'm, you killed him; jc?pe kuhkemia- 

 eant'm, you are the murderer; u-epe cuk- 

 ki'i mm fiot, you have stole, etc., 121, 122; 

 ciipiiilldki'innamun w^pe warne, (he com- 

 mands that) 'all men now repent', p. 

 118 ( 'only •, Mass. Ps., Ps. 2, 12) . See 

 »■(•/«'. 



[Peq. ii-epi-, but (=qiit, EL), Exp. 

 INLiyhew, Lord's Prayer.] 



•wepumauonat, wehpumonat, wepim- 

 6nat, etc., v. t. to eat with, to share a 

 meal with: irilipiimup, he did eat with 

 (them). Gal. 2, 12; pish koourpimiiiiica), 

 ye shall eat with me, 1 Sam. 9, 19; yemh 

 'tmhncDineepemukqiHjy, they shall 'dine' 

 with me, Gen. 43, 16; kcowelipumopan- 

 neg, thou didst eat with them. Acts 



11, 3 {wehpilliltid; let us eat together, 

 Exp. Mayhew). 



[Del. irijtaiitiii (recipr.), to eat with 

 each other, Zeisb. Gr. 133.] 



wepumawaonk, n. carnal connection 

 (natural or unnatural), Lev. 18, 23. 



wequai, n. light. Gen. 1, 4; Zech. 14, 6, 

 7; John 1, 5, 8: wequaiaj, let there be 

 light, let light be; mo wequai, there was 

 light. Gen. 1, 3. 



[Narr. wequdi, light; irequashim 

 (dimin.?), moonlight, R. W. 68.] 



■wequananteg, n. 'candle', Prov. 31, 18; 

 lamp, light, (ien. 15, 17; Ex. 27, 20; 



Lev. 24, 2: chugohtxiij, a burning 



lamp. Gen. ].5, 17; vequdnaiitei/iuli, 

 chikohtdiish, lamps burned. Rev. 4, 5 

 {irasdquondnHick, a light or candle; «?- 

 qiidiidnctekonnduhtuk, a candlestick, C. 

 161). The word 'torch' is transferred 

 by Eliot without translation, as in Zech. 



12, 6. 



[Narr. weqitanantig, a candle or light; 

 pl.+«»!<(s/i; wekinan, 'a light fire', 

 R. W. 48.] 



wequash, n. the swan, Lev. 11, 18. 



[Narr. wequash, \>\.~diiog; and )rdm- 

 paturk, pi. -j-quduog, R. W. 86.] 



*wequasliiin (Narr.), moonlight, R. W. 

 68. .'^ee imjiial. 



wequtteamunat ( =inlnjiiiiiniiniidt),we- 

 qutteamaudnat ( =iri liijinhniiaiioitat), 

 wequtteamoa { =iri hiiiiiliniKiu), v. i. 

 she calleth, 'crieth', Prov. 8, 3: vehqut- 

 teamu'eon, when I called, Is. 65, 12 {noo- 

 wequUeam, I call, C. 183; ncoireqiitleamn- 

 miiii, we call, ibid. 184). See irrlikoino- 

 nai. 



*wequttinneat, to be called, (". 184. 



*wesattiniis, red oak; nisukkfiiik, oak 

 wood, ('. 164. Sen */>angduli'misk. 



*wesattippog-, bitter water, C. 168. 



weshaganash, wlshagkinish., n. pi. 

 hairs on the liod)' or limbs of man or 

 animals, Ex. 35, 23; Is. 7, 20; Mark 

 1, 6; Matt. 3, 4 (of. meesmk). Adj. 

 oatveshaginnde, hairy, 2 K. 1, 8; pi. 

 v:eshnhiiinnniash, Gen. 27, 23. V. subst. 

 aiir, sluniniin. he was hairy, Gen. 27, 11 

 (iikkiixhde nivskq, a hairy bear, C. 171; 

 from kushki, rough?). [Mr Pickering 

 in index to El. Gr. gives "weshagan, 

 hair of animals." The meaning can 

 not be thus restricted, as will be seen 

 from the above examples. It is com- 

 pounded from and hog, body, or 



hogkoa, it clothes, covers the body, a.s 

 icceshittwn from tron, mouth.] See irigh- 

 shinrussiioiik. 



*weslieck (Narr.), n. the hair, R. W. 

 58. (Cf. Eth. iiha-kii, hair-doth; Sax. 

 sceacga, hair, shag. ) 



•weske. See wuske, young, new. 



*weskuiick (Narr. ), a pounding mortar, 

 R. W. 50. See loggiihtrhoiik. 



*wesogkeyeu, adv. bitterly, C. 227. 



wesogkon, adj. bitter, Prov. 27, 7; Rev. 

 10, 10. See veesogkinmonk, bitterness. 

 Cf. ii-i-e.we, gall. 



[Del. iri sack can, Zeisb. Voc. 33.] 



*wesokkuiik, oak wood, C. 164. See ire- 

 sattiiiuit. 



[Del. v'lMwhgak, black oak, Zeisb.] 



*wesonikuh, interj. ah! (of sorrow?), C. 

 234. 



■wesoshaonk. See iriexauitlidonk. 



*wesquaubenaii (Narr.), to wrap up a 

 Viody fnr the grave, R. W. 161. See 

 iree.'tqKapiniiajt. 



