^66 Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. 



timaii (jig), V. sleep (D'Albertis). 



tuo (m), n. smoke. Cf. tu. 



tupaltaean, v. to fold (= tu, Eng. two, pal = pala, taean). 



turam (?), iadu turam, v. to infoiin. 



tureipa (ir), v. to call for ; turan (s), v. to call, to bid (b). 



turik, turika, n. iron, a blade ; aga turik, n. an axe ; gi turik, n. a 



knife ; elap turik, n. hoop iron ; turik plagusi (b), n. an iron 



pot. 

 turk, turko (n), n. tbe bowl of a bamboo tobacco pipe, 

 turkekai (m), n. a man. 

 turkiam (n), (?) turkiam merkai. 

 tui'kikai, n. a cock-fowl, 

 turku (s) = turk. 



turong (m), a. light. Cf. towanga. 

 tusi, n. a letter, a book. A Samoan -word introduced vid Lifu ; bence, 



tusi mina, Bible, i.e. precious or true book, 

 tutio, 



tutu, w. a rod. 

 tuwa (377). 



IT, suffix denoting the possessive case, of. 



ua (m), ad. yes. 



uari (i), n. lime. 



ubalo, n. bladder ; ubal-madu (b), n. tbe calf of tbe leg. 



ubi (si), n. greediness; v. to want (s). 



ubigasin, v. to dislike (ITacfarlane). 



ubigiasin (s), v. to ignore, to be without a wish for. 



ubigosia (?), noi ubigosia kunia onailai, lie would not reject ber. 



Mark, vi. 26. 

 ubile (m), a. greedy. 

 Tibilnga, n. will, wish; ngau ubilnga lako maigi, kapuza nginu 



ubilnga, not my will but thy will. ITark, xiv. 36. 

 ubimepa = ubinmepa. 

 ubin, n. a wish, 

 ubinmepa (s), ubinemepa, v. to wish, to desire, to like, [ubin- 



meamaipa.] 

 ubinmizi (s), v. to love. 



