248 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



[bulletin 25 



draw water — t-untinued. 

 water {=quomphippaog, 1 Chr. 11, 18); 

 nmthupau, ncotuhupau, I drew water for 

 (him). See dip. 



dream, unnukquorn, he dreams; v. t. 

 tiiittiiumgquomun unnugquomimjtd; I 

 dreamed a dream. 



dress, lioykaionk (aukcoonk, C) , agarment 

 or covering of skin {acoh, 'their deer 

 skin', R. W.) ; monak, cloth {m6nak, 

 C. ; maunek, 'an English coat or man- 

 tle,' R. W. ), a garment, cloak, coat, etc. 

 (irdwdmek, a dress, C. ) ; petashqushdonk, 

 petaoshqushaonk, a cloak, outer garment. 

 See clothe; clothing. 



drink (n.), onkuppe, oukup, ininulike 

 inittiitlamdonk, strong drink. 



drink (v.), iimttdttam, he drinks; inithil- 

 ta-fh, drink thou {ahque uuuniatous (= 

 iinmeuttaifli), do not drink all, R. W. ; 

 pdtUous notatdm, give me drink, ibid.; 

 nmldttam, I drink, C. ) ; vbl. n. act. ivuttat- 

 tainm<mk, drink ;mtartn//ia5o»A', his drink. 

 Tliere was another word, meaning to 

 drink, wliich is nut to be found in Elitit 

 except in compounds. Its radical was 

 mp- OT-xap- (perhaps related to sah&e, 

 saupdc, soft, thin, macerated; cf. A-S. 

 sipan, Engl, sup, sip, soup, etc. ), thus, 

 tdpsuppamivehhittit (Mass. Ps. ), t&pslp- 

 pdmltpltit {E\.), 'when they have well 

 drunk', John 2, 10 Itdpi-nppam-hcttit, 

 when they have drunk enough] ; kogkris- 

 sippwaeu, a drunkard [kogkeae-sippam, 

 he drinks madly or tc i madni'.>^s] ; oliksiji- 

 paiinrrai, [=,thqije-Kij>j'<n,i,r,,,„], 'if ycu 

 leave off drinking', C; inisxiiiniisijjpdiii- 

 inneat l=wussaume-sippaminneat, to 

 drink too much], to be drunk, ibid.; 

 irHssoiiuiippaniOe, drunken, ibid.; uliqiii' 

 kugkexujKiiiiwi.ili, don't be drunk, ibid. 



drive away, ainamhkauau, he drove 

 (liim) away or out [amaeu, k' progress- 

 ive, and f( « , he goes] ; suffix vmt-amacoh- 

 kaouh, they drove them away; inan. 

 nannmiKamamhkom sokmum, 'the north 

 win<l drives away the rain', Prov. 



driven by the wind, ;(i.s/( IcoJianaxh, 

 trmmaah, things which are driven or fly 

 before the wind; snppos. ne taannonlog 

 wahan, that which is driven by the 

 wind, flies before the wind; elsewhere, 

 Imi.mni/ntdy , lohtaiunontog, ptcoanuntog; 



driven by the wind — continued, 

 from ptooeu, it flies; ptweuunne, it 

 moves in the manner of flight; cf. free 

 thiiotiii, it blows, Howse 130. inMiwn 

 iiomshaea, the boat is driven or drives 

 before the wind orcurrent; luntnomnlio- 

 inun, 'we let the boat drive'. Acts 27, 

 15; nomshdog, they 'were driven' v. 17. 



drop, padtippdshin, padtapdshin (v. im- 

 pers. , there is a dropping, it drops ) , a 

 dropping, a drop; jil. pdiHijiiii't.thiinnxh, 

 drops; n. freq. and I'dlk'rt. jKiinhlliiunik 

 (repeated or continued dropping), 

 showers of rain: papeetedu paUippashine 

 nippeash, 'he maketh small the drops 

 of water'. Job 36, 27. 



drought, kohnkan, knnkaii. (when there 

 is dryness), dryness, drought; en. lue- 

 punne kunkanit, 'into the drought of 

 summer', Ps. 32, 4; also, knnkehteadtau 

 (it is dry), imnuhieau (it is dry), a 

 drought [from nunae, dry, and o/ito(»]. 



drunkard, hykt ixxipp' i m irnni: indef. 

 -mihi'iK ihiijhisi/iiiiniiini^iiii,. ( '. ) ; kah- 

 fiippddt [suppos. part, from kugkcissip- 

 joam], when he is drunk, a drunken 

 man {ahque kogkesupamwish, don't be 

 drunk, C); vbl. n. act. kogkeiKsippiim- 

 founk, drunkenness [from kogke, madly, 

 frantically, and -sippam, he drinks] ; 

 inissanmsippaminneat, kogkelwopdntit, to 

 be drunk, C.; wussomsippammouk, 

 drunkenness, ibid, [from missaume-xip- 

 pam, he drinks too much]. 



dry, iiaiiahpiii, inninhjie, nnindipi [foro")!- 

 "7'/'"]i i' i*^ '!'■>' ("iii'i/i/ii, dry; iimijijia- 

 qiidf, dry weather, R. W. ; lumndpi, dry, 

 C ), i. e. permanently dry, as the 'dry 

 land' (Gen. 1, 9, 10), as distinguished 

 from the water or marshy land, -itppa 

 in composition signifying to be and 

 remain. Otherwise, nunnobiyeu: ai/im 

 ketuh nunnobiyn'mt, 'he made the sea 

 dry land', Ex. 14, 21. nunohtde, dry, 

 that which has become dry Inun-olileaa, 

 it becomes dry, dries up] : nunohtAe 

 mehtug, a dry tree, tiiinmibohke [ntin- 

 appii-iihke'\, the earth, dry Ipid. iinn- 

 noholdide, nahohteai [^nitiuippK-ohteaiiJ, 

 dry ground, earth which becomes dry 

 (comparatively); nunnobohteddmit, na- 

 bohica6uut, on dry ground; yiilrh nnn- 

 nobiihlini'innt, 'from the dust of the 

 earth'. Gen. 2, 7. The radical, nun-. 



