TKTOIBULL] 



ENGLISH-NATICK DICTIONARY 



281 



idle — coutiimed. 



mi IK III! j mil michick {p\.), idle persons, R. 

 W.; \]A. n. nanomjxmisifuonk, idleness, 

 C. [from nnnompamrau, he begs?]. 



idol, nunneukontunk, itnnnukontuiik {nin- 

 nukuiiionk, C. ), an image, an idol. 



if, tiilincit: tohneit nenag, if it bo so. 



image. See idol. 



imitate, iiuttiannuu, I imitate; aiaiuiau- 

 onate, to imitate, C. ; cf. eiyune {aianne, 

 C), kinds of, or of the kind ..f. See 

 like; likeness. 



immediately, tciiunk (lidwi, K. W.), 

 quickly, suddenl}', immediately. 



immerse, touopham, he puts (it) into 

 the water, hence he soaks, he seethes, 

 etc. {lomropskhommke, 'cast anchor', 

 R. W. ) . Cf. chauopham ireyaus, he boils 

 flesh {chouwi'jphash, cast it overboard, 

 R. W. ) ; nepataush sahaheg, he seethes 

 prittase. 



impossible. See possible. 



in. 

 [Note. — Left unfinished. See '//.] 



increase, mishehteau, he increases (it), 

 he makes (it) great; }}ish mishehteamin, 

 it shall be increased, made great. 

 nuDchekohteau , he increa.ses (it), he has 

 very much of ( it) . More commonly in- 

 crease is expressed by nano, signifying 

 'more and more' (El. Gr. 15): nnno 

 missl, it increaseth (is more and more 

 great) ; naiio ivaantam, he increaseth in 

 wisdom (ij more and more wise); nano 

 majiiattish (inan. pl.l, they increase in 

 number. 



indolent. See slothful; idle. 



infant, peisses [for ]jcississii , he is] very 

 small, an infant (of either sex ) ; intens. 

 ixipeissu (papoos, R. W. ; Peq. poiqi- 

 poug, Stiles); Buppos. pelssissii, papjelssit, 

 when he is very small: noh jidssissit, 

 the smallest child, 'he who is lea.st', 

 Matt. 11, 11; peimissit ketompas, thy 

 younger sister, Ezek. 16, 46; suppos. 

 part, (pi.) nag papeississitcheg, infants, 

 very small children. From peawe, 

 peaeu, it is small; dim. pease, peasin 

 (suppos. peasik), and papease (suppos. 

 papeasick ) , it is very small ; papeaxe-ussii 

 ( eontr. papeissu ) , he is very small . See 

 child, boy, girl, etc. (Del. jillairesis, a 

 boy; pilairetit, a male infant babe; qne- 

 tit, a female infant bal)e, Hkw. ) 



inform, militiiuiit, he shows (it) to ( him), 

 he informs (him) of (it); nahtus, 

 show thou (it); nahtusseh, show thou 

 (it) to me (nunnohtin, I show, C. ); 

 causat. inan. from ndau (he sees): he 

 makes him see it; cf. nehtau, show 

 thyself to (him), 1 K. 18, 1. irahteau- 

 iraluiaii [causat. inan. from irajiteau,b.e 

 knows], he makes (him) know it {wah- 

 lriniini)i, make him to know, C. ). kvh- 

 kmlaiiHiii, l-iikhnlihiiiiitii, he informs 

 ihiiu I i.f. See teach. 



inhabit. See ilwell. 



inhabitant, noh ni/il, pi. nog uijitcheg; 

 noh iniiJohkit, pi. nog iroilohkitrheg. See 

 dwell. 



inhabited, "like no n-oilolitinnik, a land 

 inhabited ( i. e. where it was possessed or 

 occupied); ohke inollo ""/o/i/.v/k, an un- 

 inhabited land; olikf jii.-ili iiiiliiliki'ln, the 

 land shall be inhabited ; chipohke \_chepi- 

 ohke^, uninhabited land. 



injure. See hurt. 



inquire, notmloman, he inquires of 

 (him), questions (him ) ; noltjjtomnhkau, 

 he prosecutes inquiry, seeks informa- 

 tion from (him); nadwnsldtteiiu, he in- 

 quires into (it), investigates (it) {neen 

 pitch nnadsitlainen, I will incjuire into 

 it; ininnoilfiitfamutta, let us search into 

 it, K. W. 1. See question. 



instead of, nom.pe, nohnonipn: sun nen 

 noinpiii, am I in (his) stead? Gen. 30,2 

 [noinpeo, it is in the place or stead of 

 (it); iioinpcnaii, he is in the place or 

 stead of (him)]. 



instruction, kuhkmtainu-ehteaonk, in- 

 struction, teaching. See teach. 



integrity, mmpundtahhaonk; sainpireh- 

 teaadonk, vbl. n. from sampv-i'hteau, he 

 makes it straight or right. 



intend, unnantam, anantani, he wills, 

 thinks, purposes, intends, has in mind: 

 [moHfi?] lie anantam nen, gut ken ne 

 anantaniaa (suppos.), 'notasi will, but 

 as thou wilt'. Matt. 26, 39; ne anontag, 

 according to his will (what he may 

 will or intend). This verb expresses 

 simple mental activity — volition, pas- 

 sion, thought. It is the primary and 

 type of a large class of verbs (corre- 

 sponding to Zeisberger's third form of 

 conjugation, in the Delaware, "in elen- 

 diiin, indicating a disposition of the- 



