TBUMBl-I.I. 



ENGLISH-NATICK DICTIONARY 



2C.1 



flow, tonwgkoii, it flow.'^, there is :i flowing 

 or flood [nipiii' tiiiiioiikun, water flows, 

 C. ); fo)nmoyA');»', fliiwing (abundantly, 

 i. e. flooding). Itnpers. verb miititch- 

 uan, uadtutrlnuin (or -oowan], it flows 

 from: si'pupoij vntlichavan, 'rivers of 

 water run down' (from), Ps. 119, 136; 

 nuppe iruttitchuan-up, 'the water gushed 

 out' (from the rock), Ps. 78, 20. 

 SDliirutchuan [goh-miichuan'], it flows 

 forth, issues from or out of; sohkhetchu- 

 an, it continues to flow forth or issues 

 continuously. Is. 3.o, 6. unnitr.hium, it 

 flows to or toward; sepuash unnitchn- 

 anasli kehtahhannit, the rivers flow to 

 the sea, Eccl. 1, 7. (initchnan, tmuchu- 

 v:an, <nmu-uichmnm [from anue-wutchu- 

 (ni], it overflows, flows excessively. 

 kuitsilcliuatt, it flows (as a stream or 

 with a current) continuously; as a sub- 

 stantive a current or flowing stream; 

 pi. -'rash, or in the active verbal 

 form iii-l-ussitchuannoao7ik sepunttssash, 

 'the stream of the brooks'. Num. 21, 

 1.5; adj. hissUchuwane sep, a flowing 

 river (Cree keesitcheu-uii , it is very 

 swift current [kees = keche, intensive] , 

 Howse 175.) Elsewhere, kussehtanhe, 

 flowing as a stream: kussehtannesepuese, 

 ' the stream of a brook'. Job 6, 15; kusseh- 

 tamij), a stream, a cuiTent; pi. ^jjeasli. 

 voireei/onchuan, it flows circuitously, 

 winds about [from uwceaushin, it winds 

 about], jyamitchuan, pomitchmwan 

 (pamutch-, pumitch-, etc.), it flows, 

 moves by flowing (describing the kind 

 of motion without regard to direction, 

 source, or degree). It is formed from 

 ponmshiia (he walks, travels, moves 

 along) by substituting the impersonal 

 termination and introducing the -ch 

 guttural, denoting involuntary or in- 

 animate activity. Cotton gives, in a 

 nearly related form, the verb nup-pum- 

 meclusham, 'I slide'. In all these verbs 

 the radical is coch or umtck, it proceeds 

 from. See father. 



flower, ujipcshati, peshau (uppeahau, C. ), 

 lit. 'it bursts forth', 'blossoms' [from 

 pokshau, it breaks]; pi. uppesJiaOnash. 

 See bloom. 



fly (n. ), aichans, mchaas, and mmsuhq, pi. 

 moosuhquog, flies; dimin. rnmsesdhquog. 



fly (v. ),]itweii, ptcoircii, twin'ii, it (a bird) 

 flies, moves through the air {ptoirH, it 

 is fled, R. W.; mit-taowen, I fly, C); 

 nag ptmireog, they fly away; suppos. 

 part, noh tcoweet, tcoeit, that which flies. 

 Nearly related to or identical with 

 pcDtaudu. or pmtaeii, he blows or is 

 blown. Adj. /ito»C(7»', flying, ptoocmm, 

 it (inan. obj.) flies away [ptmeti, with 

 the impersonal intransitive particle 

 -mo], tcohan, ptaihan, tcoii», it flies oris 

 blown by the wind, as du,st or snow; 

 7nsh twhanash, things driven away or 

 made to fly; suppos. ne, ptamnuntog u-a- 

 hrin (or ne tmuntog, or ne tolitcoanontog) , 

 that which flies before the wind or is 

 driven by the wind Ipicoeu-un, pass, 

 part, olptcoeu'}. jmiinininaa, it (a. hiril) 

 flies, goes swiftly through the air [as if 

 shot from a bow or gun; ptiinmtm,i~hot, 

 pass. part, from puminu, he shoots]; 

 suppos. p&mxmont, when he flies, fly- 

 ing; neg p&munemitcheg or pdmunoiiehcg, 

 they (birds, fowls) which fly; freq. 

 pdpunnlnont, habitually flying; pi. neg 

 papumiiHonclwg: papnuiuiiuiit jmikses, a 

 flying bird (bird when flying), ushpeu, 

 ushpushau, he or it mounts upward in 

 air, soars, flies up; with inan. subj. 

 nxhliniiii. iixnjiemo; suppos. imidiih cliik- 

 k!ii(i.-f„/ nsli/ixhi'iheltil, 'as sparks [when 

 they] fly upward,' Job 5, 7. u-ussemo), 

 he flees or flies (from an enemy); 

 noosem, I flee; jjlsh ncosemun, we will 

 flee (»'U.s.s('»io, he flies; 'UJU^8emoirork,they 

 fly, R. W.; v-ussema>, wussemuSiri, (he 

 is) flying away, fled, C.) ; imperat. 

 vussemaik, flee ye; suppos. umsseinoan, 

 when thou didst flee; v. t. an. wasem- 

 umhteauoiit mo»'p.toli, when he flees from 

 a bear. Huxishau, he flees to (a place or 

 person) for refuge, he runs or goes 

 quickly to; nd ussisluish or lishhn.fli, flee 

 thou thither [from vssn, by the inser- 

 tion of '.s/i to denote swift or violent ac- 

 tion, he bestirs himself, exerts himself 

 violently, does (agit) w'ith speed or ce- 

 lerity. Primarily ussisshau means sim- 

 ply he runs quickly or hastens], ushpuh- 

 hm (and spidihm), he fliestofor refuge; 

 hiig apuhhajvxwg , they fled (for safety); 

 vbl. n. act. nshpvhhann'ionk, ."pnhhco- 

 ledonk, a refuge; ■nspuhhmmie ai/euonk, 

 a refuge place, place of refuge. 



