EWGLISH-NATICK DICTIONARY 



333 



they, neg, nag (nahoh, iiagoh, El. Gr. 7; 



nag, naliog, or nagunum, C. ), they who; 



nagoh, them who, them. 



thick, hnppi, (it is) thick, close, dense 



(aippi-inachauy, thick wood, a swamp, 



R. W. ); htppahtu, in or among that 



which is thick or close, 'In thickets', 



'in covert'; knppohquodt {kuppaquat, 



E.W.), thick or cloudy weathej; kup- 



pogk! (kohpoghi, C; koppdcki, R. W.), 



thick, dense. See close. 



thicket, kuppohkomuk (a place shut in or 



inclosed or a place where trees are thick 



or close). Ci. kuppahtu, 'in thickets'. 



thief, kommmtowam, -in, n. agent, from 



himmmto, he steals. See steal. 

 thigh, iiiiiiijiiini, iiiifliquau; neehqiiau, my 

 thigh; cf. iiiohpii, the hip. apjome, pi. 

 apbmash, the thigh, thighs, R. AV". 

 thin, saupae, sabae, thin, not hard or 

 dense, in a liquid or semiliquid state, 

 soft. See soft. wosKabpe,wosappe{imis- 

 sdppi, C; wass&ppi, E. W.), thin; wos- 

 sappehteau (inan. cans.), he makes it 

 thin;' pass, it is made thin, 

 thing, tedg; ne tedg . . . matta tedg, 

 iiiatteag, something . . . nothing [ted,- 

 qim, what thing, R. W.); pi. tedguash, 

 teatiguash, 'money', movable prop- 

 erty, teaguas, a matter or thing not 

 material or tangible; pi. teaguassimsh, 

 things, matters, res; with redupl. iimne 

 teanleagiiassinish, all matters, all things. 

 Gen. 24, 1 [teag and usm, a thing re- 

 lated to or dependent on animate ac- 

 tion]. 

 think, andntam, unnntam, he thinks, 

 purposes, wills, supposes, has in mind; 

 nuUenanlatii, I think; nuttenantomun, I 

 think it, I will it; ne anantamup, that 

 which I did think; matta ne aitanlam 

 nen, qut km ne anantaman (suppos.), 

 'not as I will, but as thou wilt'. Matt. 

 26, 39; ne anoiitog, wha.t he may think 

 or may will, 'according to his will', 

 John 5, 21. In form this word is a 

 frequentative or intensive from an ear- 

 lier form, Antam, which is not found in 

 Eliot. Roger Williams has n' tnnn&nlam 

 or nedntam, I think (Chip, hiendam, 

 he thmks. Bar., q. v.). This primary 

 verb, which may be translated ' he is 

 minded' or 'he has in mind', is used 

 in composition of ail verbs which ex- 



think — continued, 

 press mental states, conditions, and 

 operations, the passions, emotions, etc., 

 and denotes mental activity, as usm 

 denotes physical activity. The animate 

 active form of andntam or vndntam 

 would be andnaii, he wills (him), 

 nearly corresponding with anmian, nn- 

 nunau, he commands (him); and a cor- 

 responding relationship appears to exist 

 Ijetween ussu, he acts, ussmi, he does 

 it, and vmssin, he says, nihmntnm, 

 I mussantam Imissi-antam], he thinks 

 much or habitually, he is minded or 

 disposed (mmdntam, he aims at, C. ). 

 1 third. See three. 

 thirst, kohketmn, kuhkittta>n, he is 

 thirsty; nnkkohhitlrmi, I thirst (/t/ccb/'- 

 katone, I am thirsty, R. \\.; nukkdhktt- 

 ' tmn, C); suppos. kohkmttaig, when he 

 thirsts; noh kohkuttmg, one who thirsts; 

 I pi. neg kohkuttcogig, they who thirst, the 

 I thirsty;vbl. n. kohhittmnmonk, kdnkutla)- 

 nmonk, thirst. From kohnkan, kunkan, 

 (it is) dry, and loan, mouth. 

 thirty, nishwinchag {shwincheck, R. W.; 

 nishwinnechak, pi. -suog, C. ; Peq. neezun- 

 chaug nauhvt piaugg (twenty-ten) and 

 srmtnchaug, Stiles); an. pi. +kodlog; 

 inan. pi. -\-kodtash. 

 this, yen, this (thing); an. yenoh, this 

 (man); pi. inan. yeush, an. yeag (yd, 

 R. W. ): yeu nepauz, this month; yen 

 kemkok, this day, to-day; yen unne, yeu 

 in [yeuunni, C), thus, in this manner; 

 yeu tvaj, for this cause; yeu or yewjeu, 

 at this time, now; yen, at this place, 

 here; yeunugque (toward this), hither 

 {yd iveque, thus far; yowa, thus; yd 

 nowekin, I dwell here; yd uiirlie, from 

 hence, R.W.). Of. we, that, 

 thistle, kogkuunogohquohhou. Cf. kihnik- 



kehtahwhau, he pricks or pierces. 

 thither, j/ra«, yaen [yd en, to yonder]; 

 yen nogqiie in kah yd in, hither and 

 thither; monrhi-th yeu vrntch, yaaiinh, go 

 hence [go] to yonderplace, Matt. 1 7, 20. 

 See yonder. 

 thorn, kuus, a thorn, briar, bramble; 

 asinnekmis, assunnekuus [haxxune-ki'mti, 

 stony (very hard) briar], a thorn, 

 thorn bush. Cf. m'iti^.?, an awl; m'nii- 

 km, a nail; kouhquodl, an arrow. 



