Ray & Haddon — TJie Languages of Torres Straits — II. 251 



pudeipa (ii), v. to fall doTni ; gaiga pudico (b), w. west. 



pudemin (s), v. to make oteisance. 



pudiso. See pudeipa. 



pudiz, V. to undress. 



pudizi (s), V. to retain ; balbai-pudiz, v. to peep ; ngona-pudiz, to 



rest, 

 pudo (Mb), n. the shaft of a javelin, 

 pugan (?) ipidado pugan, v. to reprobate, to blaspbeme ; a. profane ; 



rimarim pugan, v. to find fault. Hark, vii. 2 ; watri pugan, v. 



to speak evil, 

 pui, n. a tree ; a log ; -v^ood ; pui-patalai, pui-patralai, n. tborns 



[puinge, puia.] 

 puian, V. to blow. 



puidan, v. to hang ; ngona puidan, n. a palm (Macfarlane). 

 puidiz, V. (to hang ?), paru mapu puidiz, to hang a weight in front. 



Mark, ix. 42. 

 puidiz = poidiz, korkak mapu puidiz. Mark, iii. 5. 

 puie (m), n. the fore fin of the turtle. 

 puiman, v. to suck, 

 puinge (?) trees. 



pukato, n. a locust ; a grasshopper (b). 

 puki, n. a hump, the side of the abdomen, 

 pukuk (ii), n. the heel. Cf. pokoko. 

 puiman (?), ganu-pulman, n. smell, 

 pungaipa (s), giun-pungaipa, v. to be foolish ; berai-pungaipa, v. to be 



easy. Mark, x. 25 ; ikane pungaipa, v. to be glad. Mark, 



xii. 38. 

 pupariz (s), to flee. Cf. bupariz. 

 pupui, 71. a flute, 

 pupumiz, V. to heal, 

 pura (ii), n. the eyelid, 

 pura (m), skin, 

 purapura, n. the producing of disease or sickness by magic (puripuri), 



a Daudai word rarely used in the islands. Cf. maid, 

 purapar = parpar. Mark, vi. 5, 

 puridan (?), guda-puridan, v. to be insolent, 

 puriddralenga (?), gamu puradoralenga, whole, well in body. Mark, 



ii. 17. 



