62 A DICTIONARY SUNDANESE. 



Bongkék, small and dwarf, said of a man. 



Bongkok, crooked, mostly witli old age; hump-backed. 



Bongkokan, the curvecl beam of a Chinese plough to which the buffaloe is yoked. 



Bongkonol, a variety of bambu, thin and slight in stem. 



Bongkonol, a variety of Pandan growing wild among the mountains, the leaves of 



■which are used for tying up Java Sugar. 

 Bongkor, a man not able to pay rent ; land , as a sawah , usually planted left uncultiva- 



ted. Bongkor Pajeg, unable to pay Pajëg or the fixed rent. 

 Bongkot, the thick end of any thing, as of a stick or piece of wood. The lower and 



almost solid end of a stick of bambu. The piece of wood fixed in the handle of any 



implement, to hold it by. 

 Bongsor, young but grown large. Said of either man , animals or plants , which though 



still young have grown up to a large size. Budak bongsor, a lad who is big for his 



age. Penyakit Bongsor. The small pox. 

 Bonténg, Cucumbers. Cucumis melo- much planted in the upland Paddy lands calleci 



humah, and in the Sawahs, as a seconcl erop, when the paddy has been cut. 

 Bont eng Suri, a variety of the Cucumber. The Queen's cucumber? 

 Bon tot, a tree or stick which lias been burnt, and one end remains unscathed- that un- 



scathed end is the Bontot. The fag end of a Sigar that has been smoked and thrown 



away. Any thing which has been burnt and a stump left , as in a wood fire , the fag ends. 

 Bo-ol, the anus. 

 B o p a t i , see Bupati. 

 Bopong, name of the colour of a horse, being a fawn colour, or ihtermediate between 



white and brown. 

 Bor, agimlet, a borer, an auger, a centre piece. It is the Dutch word Boor which has 



the same meaning. 

 Borak, or Al -b o rak, the Lightning in Arabic. The supernatural steed on which Mo- 

 hammed pretended to make night- journeys to Jerusalem and heaven. 

 Borangan, afraicl, timid, fearful. 

 Borélang, variegatecl in color , having several colors on the same ground. The word is 



also applied to the tiger royal, as having a striped Inde brown and black. 

 Bor o, to run after, to pursue, to go to any one or to any place, to approach. 

 Bor o ampar, quite impossible, ricliculous to think of it. 

 Bor o tëuyn, foorsooth, quite impossible. It is quite out of the question. 

 Bor o Budur, the name of the remains of a magnificent Hindu tempel in the Besidency 



of Kadu , where Buddha is frcquently represented. Bara becomes in Javanese Boro- 



Bara, C. 461, surrounding , encompassing , heavy, weighty, important, of consequence. 



Bliudr in Hindi, happy, prosperous, propitions. Calcutta Review No. 18 Page 384. 



„The Great Propitious". Or Budur may be an abbreviation of Budu-raja. Budu, C. 



