AND ENGLISH. 53 



Beuk re uh, coilecl, or lmddlecl in a lieap, as a person or animal asleep, any tliing lying 



in a heap in a hole. 

 Bëulali, split, dividecl; to split, to cleave, to rend; Part, portion , side, quarter. Evi- 



dently derived from JBila, C. 473, a fissure, a rent, a perforation. 



Iyo suluh kudu di beidahan , this fire wood must be split up. 



Papan na beidah , the plank is split. 



Sa beulah ti wetan , on the East side. 

 Beuleum, to burn , to consume with fire. 

 Bëuli, to buy, to purchase ; hanto kabeuli, I c'ant buy it, or literally it cannot be 



bought (by me). 

 Bëulit, a turn or hitch of a rope or string; entangled ; twisted or twined round. Kabeu- 



lit, entangled by a rope getting twisted round. 

 Beunang, to get , to obfain , to get possession of. Beunang na, what is got, the thing 



obtained. 

 Beun Sur, fulland good as grain or seed. Applied figuratively to any thing which turns 



out well and satisfactory. Bilang beuneur , truly said , no mistake. Pare na beuneur , 



the paddy is full in the grain. 

 Bëunëur h é j o , said of growing paddy , when the husks are full , but the grain still 



green. 

 Bëung'ëut, the face of man or animal; the countenance. 

 Bëungkak, swollen or risen slightly, as rivers by rain. 

 Bëungkëut, a parcel or bundie, any thing tied together , as firewood, Paddy, vegeta- 



bles etc. Di beungkeut, to tie together, to tie up. 

 Beunt ah, awake, with the eyes open. 

 Beun tas, to break down, to demolish. Beuntas pager, to break down the fence, to 



exceed one's authority, to use unlawful violence. 

 Bëuntëur, a small fish in the rivers or in ponds, of a yellowish tinge. Barbus binola- 



tus. 

 Bëunyëur, small broken rice, the grains which are broken in pounding or grinding. 

 Bëunying, a variety of wild fig tree. Ficus fistulosa. 

 Bëurang, in the day time, the day time in contradistinction to night. Also applied as 



indicating an advancecl period in the clay , towards noon , and thus not very early in 



the morning. Early, not at a late period. 

 Bëurat, heavy in weight; also used figuratively to indicate affection for any one. Bara, 



C. 461, heavy, weighty, important, of consequence. Batu beurat a heavy stone. Beu- 

 rat ka anale éwé , having an affection for child and wife. 

 Bëurat sang ga, said of ripening paddy, heavy on the stem. 

 B ë u r ë u m , Red ; verbally Ngabeureuman , to make red , that is to make any one ashamed 



of himself, to worst an adversary. 



