ENOLISH-NATICK DICTIONARY 



253 



end (v. i. ) — continued. 



ii-ehquoshau, with it' progressive, it 

 moves onward to its limit. 



en.d(v. t.). See finish. 



enemy, matwau, (he is) an enemy; 7mm- 

 malwom, my enemy; Jcummaiwomog, thy 

 enemies; n. agent, mativaen, an enemy, 

 one who acts as an enemy; nummat- 

 wainii, ut kummatwdmut, I am an enemy 

 to thy enemies, Ex. 23, 22. Elsewhere, 

 matwau, 'a soldier', i. e. an armed 

 enemy. See soldier; war. 



Eng'lishman, WaiUacone, pi. Wni'itncorifi- 

 aiii/, 'i-oat-men' or clothed, R. W. ( hv/N 

 dhkooHoij, 'such as wear coats', C. ). 

 Morton, in his N. E. Canaan (book 3, 

 chapter v), says, "the Salvages of the 

 Massachussets . . . did call the English 

 planters Wotawquenange [for -auge ?], 

 which in their language signifieth stab- 

 bers or cut-throates ... a southerly 

 Indian that understood English well 

 . . . calling us by the name of Woto- 

 quanaawge; what that doth signifle, 

 hee said hee was not able by any dem- 

 onstration to expresse." The writer 

 confounded Wautacontiang, coat men, 

 withC/ia«7«ag»oci(see below). Wauia- 

 coimk, an English woman, R. W. ; dim. 

 WaiiUironi'inese, an English youth, ibid. 

 Airdiiiiagfxsuck, pi. English men, "as 

 much as to say, these strangers", ibid. ; 

 ananagus-antotranh, speak (thou) Eng- 

 lish, ibid, [aivdim, R. W. (hx/imn, El.), 

 somebody, anybody; awanick, '.some 

 come', ibid.; awaun eu-d, who is that? 

 ibid.] (Peq. Waunnuxuk, Englishmen, 

 Stiles). Chduquaquock, 'that is, Knive- 

 men ' , R. W. ( Chokquog, Oiogqussuog, C. ; 

 Englishmansog or Chohkquog, title to 

 Indian Laws, 1705) [rhohqubg (rhau- 

 quock, H. W.), a knife]. EiigUKlinidii- 

 viwk (pl.),R. \V. 



enmity, ni'kennhlluoiik, enmity, mutual 

 hatred [vbl. n. from .ifkoieum, he 

 hates] . 



enough, Idpi, taupi, (it is) sufficient, 

 enougti (tadbi, R. W.; tdpi, C. ); nut- 

 lapet (?), I have enough, Gen. 33, 9; 

 imperat. 3d pers. sing, inparh, let it 

 suflBce, let it be enough. Perhaps from 

 ut-appu, he rests at, sits down at. So, the 

 English 'enough' has been referred 

 to the Heb., Chal<i.. Syr., and Etliiop. 



enough — continued. 



to rest, to be quiet, wamut, (there is) 

 enough; inan. pi. wamutash, enough, 

 sufficient (things) : ohke wamut, there is 

 land enough; nmivameU, I have enough, 

 there is enough for me; wamacli, let it 

 suffice; ii'omohk, wamdk, when or if it 

 is enough; tramenmi, he has ejiough 

 ( ivadmel, laAbi, it is enough, R. W. ) ; 

 from iramc-iit, to the whole, at the 

 whole. 



ensnare. See catch. 



enter, petutteau trelnomut, he entered 

 the house or tent, he went in; petut- 

 /eaop, they entered in; petuiteash (peetit- 

 teash, C; petitees, R. W. ), come thou 

 in, enter in; pettUteadt, when he enters 

 ( lawhitcJi mat petHedyean, why come you 

 not in? R. W.) ; cf. petau, he puts (it) 

 into, petukau, he goes in or into, he is 

 entering or going to enter [from jief-riu, 

 with i'' progressive]. See go. 



entreat. See supplicate. 



envy, ishhtnanatuonk (cf. sekeneadtmmk, 

 hatred) (ishkauanssae, envious; ii<koii- 

 oiissue, enviously, C). 



equal, tatuppe, alike, equally; velatup, 

 iw tatuppe, 'like, so', El. Gr. 22 {mtd- 

 tup, ' it is all one ' , R. W. ) ; tatuppeyeuoa, 

 it is equal to, like to {tatuppeyeu, 'just 

 so'; tattuppeySue, 'equally', C); tatttp- 

 peyeumog, they are like, equal; inan. 

 subj. tatuppeyeumash ; suppos. latiippe- 

 yeuok-ish, when (things) are equal. 

 From tdpl, enough, by reduplication (?). 



erect (adj.) . See right; stand erect; man. 



erect, set upright, tmimashau nepat- 

 liilKjiionkiili, he set up an image, 1 K. 

 7, 21 (iriiiiiiiish ohkiik, 'set on the pot', 

 Ezek. 24, 3; i. e. stand it over the fire). 

 Inan. obj. vunnohteau, he set (it) up- 

 right, erected (it), as a tower, a post, 

 etc. (cf. wanna.shque, on the top of; 

 iramiashikomuk, a.chimney) . veepaltam, 

 he erects or stands (it) up [v. t. inan. 

 from neepau, he stands up]. 



err, parineu, he goes astray. See astray. 



escape, poliqiiohhaiii, he escapes, goes 

 clear; jinhquoluisli, pohquawhiw kuh- 

 hog, escape thou, save thyself, tomeu, 

 he escapes, saves himself; caus. iom- 

 heau, he saves or causes to escape 

 [related to tofu, ptmeu, he flies, and to 

 loiiiogkoti, it flows]. See deliver. 



