186 Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. 



diabo. Mark, v. 13. 



diadi, n. a sponge. 



dibago, n. dew ; (b) a fog. 



dibidib, dibidibi, n. a round shell ornament, the top of a cone sliell 



ground flat ; a dish, made of shell, 

 digidigi (ii), n. a white duck, 

 dimunu-pagan, v. to pinch. Cf. dimur. 

 dimur (jvrb), n. a finger, 

 dipaman, n. an oath, 

 dirdimai = dorodimoin. 

 diuidu, V. to retain ; ngitamun pawa diuidu, your tradition. Mark, 



yii. 13. 

 diwanamani (b), v. to rejoice (prob. = diwana-mani, make a dance), 

 diwapa, v. to dance. See gamu-diwapa. 

 diwi (m), n. a scorpion. Cf. idiidi. 

 do, n. a bridge. 



doam (Mb), n. the cross ties inside a canoe, 

 doar, n. a black sea fowl. 



doba-buada, w. the wayside. Mark, iv. 15. Cf. buado. [dobabuadanu.] 

 dobu (s), a. old, rotten, 

 dobunga, a. rotten. 



dobura, dobura (always with mata) ; mata dobura, ad. immediately, 

 dodolae, w. the second brother. Mark, xii. 21. Cf . dada, alae, dadaig. 

 dogam, n. a place ; a bed ; table. Mark, vii. 4 ; the floor, [dogamunu, 



dokamnu.] 

 dogaman (? dogamanu, from dogam), in its place. Mark, xiii. 14. 

 dogei (ii), n. the planet Jupiter (?) Cf. dorgai. 

 doid, doido, n. a plain, a wilderness ; balpudai doid, a market, [doidpa 



doidonu.] 

 dokal (?), ngita ngulaig amadan dtikal natizo, ye know summer is nigh. 



Mark, xiii. 28. 

 dokam, dokam = dogam. 

 dokap, dokopi, n. the thigh ; kuiai torik dokopingu pardan, drew a 



sword from the thigh. Mark, xiv. 47. Cf. drakapi. 

 dongan, 



donga-wakasin, n. a savage (Macfarlane). 

 dopuza, n. an old thing ; dopu = dobu. 

 dora-tudan, v. to weed. 



