Eay & Haddon — The Languages of Torres Straits — II. 201 



ilagiz (?), lako kai pa ilagiz, the rent will again fly open. Mark, ii. 21, 



See palagiz. 

 ilamiz, suffix, against, 

 ilarkoubo, n. flax (Macfarlane). 

 il-get (Mb), n. the middle finger ; the index finger in Moa. Cf. 



klaknetoi get. 

 ima, 



imaiginga, v. not to see. 

 imaipa, imeipa (m), v. to see, to find; paru-imamoin, they saluted. 



[imiz, imizi, iman, imamoin.] 

 imaizigal, n. the person seeing a thing, 

 imana (b), n. the world. 

 imi (b), n. a spouse, husband, 

 imi (n), n. a sister-in-law. 



imi-garkazi (b), n. a son-in-law (lit. husband-son), 

 imuliz-ilamizo, v. to say things against, to accuse, to envy, 

 imuso (b), a species of grass. 

 ina, ino, a. the, this ; ad. here, 

 inabi, a. the, this; a, an. 

 inabi-durai (s), pron. these, 

 ina-nabiget (m), n. this hand ; five, 

 inguje (m), v. to urinate. 



ini, n. the penis ; the vertical firestick. (385.) 

 inile, a. male (lit. possessing ini). 

 inil-tiam, n. a male turtle, 

 injura (m), n. a small lizard, 

 ino = ina. 



inur (m), n. darkness, night. [inuria.J 

 iobuia, n. by the way. See iabu. 

 io, 



ioipa, V. to incline, 

 ioka V. to recline, 

 ionan v. to recline, 

 iongu — iangu. 



iounga, n. a porch, [ioungapa.] 

 ipal, ipel, pron. both, two. 



ipatamaiginga (?), ngi minaipatamaiginga, carest thou not. Mark, iv. 38. 

 ipataman, v. to finish. 



