trvmecll] 



NATICK-ENGLISH DICTIONARY 



297 



moldy — CDiitinued. 



(jUonkrjiKiff, 'ru^^t', JIatt. Ii, Id; og(/iixh- 

 ki, it is wet. 



mole, mameechiiinif, Lev. 11, 30. 



money. "The Indians are ignorant of 

 Europe's coin; }'et they have given a 

 name to ours, and call it moneosh, from 

 the English money", R. W. Eliot 

 translates money by ledgmtsh, Icatigumh 

 (pi. of li'ug, thing, object), res; and 

 Roger AVilliams gives nnl-leangun^h, 

 'my money'. See wampum. 



month, ncpauz (the sun), a month {pau- 

 suck n'pai'ius, a month; nquit pawsuch- 

 en'paum, one month; nees pawsxick 

 n'pm'ms, two months, etc., R. W. ). 

 See sun; moon. 



moon, nepauzshad, nanepaiizsJi((d, iiniie- 

 paushadt [nanepaiishat, the moon, the 

 moon god ; munndnnock, a name of the 

 sun or moon, R.W. ; Peq. weyhan, moon. 

 Stiles); vuske iiepauzme, new moon (go 

 urqtiitteunk, a new moon; paushesui, a 

 half moon; irerpiashirn, a light moon, 

 R.W. ). Dimin. from nep&uz, the sun,= 

 nepauzese(l). 



moose, riKDS, pi. mcosoog (for 'fallow 

 deer', 1 K. 4, 23) ("Tlie Elke, which 

 the Salvages call a J/o.«« ", Morton, N. E 

 Canaan. "Moon, a beast bigger than a 

 Stagge", Smith, Descr. of N. England, 

 1616. mods, Y)\. moosuog, 'the great ox, 

 or rather a red deer', R. AV. Abn. 

 mSs, pi. jnSsSk, 'orignal', Rasles. ) 



more, dnue (the sign of the compara- 

 tive): dnue wiinnegen, better; dnue onk 

 nen, more than me; dnue onk vnme, 

 more than all. aneu, anueu, he is more 

 (than another), he is superior (nidtiin- 

 nuiinii, I overcome or conquer, C. ); 

 suffix an. progr. wut-anenkouh, he is 

 better than he, i. e. superior to him, 

 Prov. 12, 9. From the euppos. aneit 

 (noli aneit, he who is above or superior), 

 with the indefinite prefix, comes, per- 

 haps, manil [m'one((], a god, something 

 superior. "There is a general custom 

 amongst them at the apprehension of 

 any excellency in men, women, birds, 

 beasts, fish, etc., to cry out Maniitdo, 

 that is, it is a god, as thus if they see one 

 man excel others in wisdom, valour, 

 strength, activity, etc., they cry out 

 MamUdo, a god", R. W. 111. The 



more — continued. 



progr. form inUaneukouh, he is better 

 than he, is used in Prov. 12, 9, mean- 

 ing he is superior, is better off. Com- 

 pounds: dtiiiiroill l^dmif-irolt-adQ, more 

 than enough, too much; dnupde, over- 

 flowing; amnmttchutmn, anitchumi, it 

 overflows, najio (a sign of the compar- 

 ative ) , more and more. 



moreover, v:onk, again, moreover, also. 



morning', molilomjifni (mautdhon, R.W. ). 

 See day. 



morro'w, .foHyi (soi'iop, R. W. ; sniiji, C. ; 

 Abn. seba, Rasles) , tomorrow. nom- 

 podeu, on the morrow (i. e. early next 

 morning); suppos. nompnk, nnmpuh- 

 keik, 11(1 ndmpnnk, (when it was) morn- 

 ing, next morning [from nompe, again]. 



morsel, chogq, kodchuhki. See piece; spot. 



mortar, toggnliwhunk, togukwonk, togwonk 

 (Idcunck or tivsknnck, their pounding 

 mortar, R. W.), a mortar or place for 

 pounding corn; ul toggnliwhorignnit, in 

 a mortar, in mills. Num. 11, 8. From 

 tackhummin, to grind corn, R.W. ; tog- 

 gultlinm, he grinds, C. [ingkan, he 

 strikes, pounds] . 



mother, dkasoh, his motlier, tlie mother 

 of (okdxn. and irilcJurliinr, a mother, 

 R. W. ; initcliehinni, her mother, C. ); 

 ndkas, nmkas, my mother (nokace, nich- 

 whmi; R.W.) ; kdkas, konkas, thymother; 

 wame okasuoli, she was the mother of 

 all (living), Gen. 3, 20; indef. wutoka- 

 sin (n-nttookdnin, C. ), a mother, i. e. any 

 mother, the mother of anyone; collect. 

 okasiiiiieiink, mothers, collectively or as- 

 a class, all motherhood. From the 

 same root as dlike, the earth, com- 

 pounded with odas, animal, animate 

 being, or with -us-ni, the verb of ani- 

 mate activity, the producing animal, 

 the animate producer; but the form is 

 that of the verb dkasii, she produces;. 

 dkasoh, she produces him or her; dka- 

 suoh, she produces them. Cf. asm, he 

 goes or proceeds from; wutcheu, he be- 

 gins, comes from or out of; wshoh, 

 dshoh, father, etc. vutchehwau is evi- 

 dently the cau.s. an. (imlrhehhuati) from 

 wulcheti, he proceeds from or orieinates 

 from. 



mountain, innl<-lui { inidi-hn, V. I; in I'om- 

 IKjsition -iidrhn: misclrhn [nussi-adchnl 



