TRUMBULL] 



ENGJ.ISH-NATICK DICTIONAEY 



341 



wampum, wompam. — continued. 

 English by the name wampum or wam- 

 pumpeage. vjompam, the white beads 

 'which they make of the stem . . . 

 or stock of the periwinkle [Pyrula 

 carica or P. canaliculata Say] which 

 they call meteaHhock when all the 

 shell is broken off', R. W. 128: 

 irau6mpeg or wauompesichick-mesim, 

 give me white (money), ibid. "A 

 kind of beads . . . which they call 

 immpam-peak ... of two sorts . . . 

 white and ... of a violet colour", 

 Morton, N. E. Canaan. Abn. Saii- 

 baiihi, pi. -bialc, white beads; segan- 

 hi^-hmk, black beads; Sanbigan, -nak, 

 'canon de porcelaine', Easles. The 

 primitive umpeag or ompek, 'that which 

 pays tribute', may be traced in Eliot's 

 translation in such compounds aa ne- 

 moinpaiil Inemunum-ompai], 'he hath 

 taken a bag of money', Prov. 7, 20; 

 oswwuiinompacheg, 'money changers'. 

 Matt. 21, 12, etc. suckauhock (imir- 

 Jiackus, Wood), 'their black [money], 

 sdc/ri signifying black', R. W.; suckau- 

 hock, nausakesacMck, ' the blackmoney ' ; 

 siickatianafmirk, the black shells; suck- 

 (iiKi.-'h'.sKijiiiisji [xiicki-trnskesukquashl, 

 ■the lilack eyes or that part of the shell- 

 fish called poquauhock (or heiu) [(pui- 

 huHg, round clam, Venus mercenaria], 

 broken out near the eyes, of which 

 they make the black [or rather dark- 

 colored, purple, 'black inclining to 

 blue'] money', ibid, nqnittompeg, 

 ' one fathom of their stringed money ' ; 

 nees-aumpaugatuck, two fathoms, etc.; 

 enomph&mmin, 'to thread or string', 

 ' thread or string these ' ; iiatouwSmpUm, 

 ' a coiner or minter ' (a maker of wamp- 

 um ) ; natouwdmpitees, ' make money or 

 coin', R.W. See scatter. 



wander, nammyeu, he wanders, goes 

 astray {noh nanmusshau, he wanders, 

 C), i. e. he goes at large (cf. nanwe, 

 general, any, common) , he loses him- 

 self, waudnit, uddmi, u-Oonv, he goes 

 astray; neg wauonitcheg, they who go 

 astray {wdwdncMck, wandering, C. ; u-a- 

 inmnuog, they wander, ibid. ). Cf. iraee- 

 »u, round about. 



want, ijuenmiat or namai, ' to lie wanting 

 or defective'; quenaxixidte, necessarily 



want — continued. 



(suppos., when it is wanting), C. ; que- 

 nauet, 'impers. verb, it is necessary', 

 Exp. Mayhew. An. pasukquemnurussu, 

 one (man) is lacking; u-annequeii.a((inM- 

 ."«(/( ;)a.9MA-, not one (man) islacking,Num. 

 31, 49; quenaim-ehik, quenaihhukqnoli, 

 quenakuk, quenmiwdhik, he lacks, is in 

 need or want of ( it) : wanne quenamo&hi- 

 km, he had no lack, 2 Cor. 8, 15; paswi 

 kukquenauhik, one thing thou lackest, 

 Mark 10, 21; Luke 18, 22; kukqumaUi- 

 kumuw, ye lack (it), Phil. 4, 10 (luik- 

 quenauwihMk, I want, C. ; matta nickque- 

 Mck, I want it not, R. W.); suppos. 

 quenanhikqiiil, if helack (it) ; quenahnk- 

 quehettit. when they were in want of, 

 when they lacked (it), John 2, 3; vbl. n. 

 quenauu-ehikmonk, quendhikmonk, a lack- 

 ing, wanting, lack of (cf. matta teng 

 nukquentamcomim, we missed nothing, 

 1 Sam.25, 1.5; mo teag quentamm, nothing 

 was missed, 1 Sam. 25, 21; quencaimn, 

 he denies (him); quenaowantam, he 

 denies (it); guejiOicdHoj', they complain, 

 R.W. ; tdirhitchqueytau-dyea-nf why com- 

 plain you? ibid.). Freq. quequenauanu- 

 mau, he is in great want, need, or diffi- 

 culty: quequeuananumdog, 'they were 

 in a strait', 'were distressed', 1 Sam. 

 13, 6; vbl. n. quequanaiidnumdonk, diffi- 

 culty, 'distress', Ifeh. 2, 17. 



war, ayeuuhtedn, ayeuiLiMtau, he makes 

 war, engages in war, tights; phh kuta- 

 i/euwehteam, thou shalt make war; 

 ayenhtedhitash, make thou war, Prov. 

 20, 18 (Jiihetteke, fight ye; juhettltlea, let 

 us fight, R. W. ) ; n. agent, ayndeaen-m, 

 one who makes war, a fighter, a ' man 

 of war'. Josh. 17, 1; vbl. n. ayeutcaonk, 

 ayeiiimtti'ionk, warring, fighting, war. 

 See fight, ayeuuhkonau, he wars 

 against, makes war on (him); mut. 

 ayeuuhkonlttiiog (they are mutually op- 

 posed), they make war on each other; 

 suppos. neg ayeuqueagig, they who are 

 opposed, adversaries. See opposite. 

 ayeuteaoiitmtriioiik [noise of war, ayeunlt- 

 tede-ontma-aonk'], an alarm of war, Jer. 

 4, 19 (irairirhaittov:ai.i:duatiyit, "tis an 

 alami', R. W. ). 



warm. See hot. 



wash, kiitr)i!sxilt(iii. he washe.-* (it); 

 kiitchuaittaif^h kugKeetash, wash thy feet; 



