AND ENGLISH. 181 



Kabayan, a person of the olden time, before the introduction of Mohammedanisra , who 

 was possessed of much supernatural power. Probably derived frora Baya, C. 460, 

 fear, terror, alarm. (Kabayan at Bali is a person, who executes the orders of the 

 village-chief, Mandega. Transact. Batav. Society of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXIII, 

 p. 45 of the „Verslag van Bali." Fr.) 



Kabayar, paid, debt cleared off. To kabayar, I c'ant pay it. 



Kabëdag, to overtake; overtaken, come up with. Done in time. 



Kabéh, all, every one, the whole. Probably compounded of the inseparable partiele Ka 

 which see- and .ö<?7t , the interjection of sight. In Malagasi Bé means numerous. (Kawi, 

 Javan. Balin. idem. Seems to be a prolongatecl form of Kweh or Akweh, Kawi, 

 Balin. of the same import, which exists in Javan. Keli. mm>^\ and in the corrupted 

 form Kyêh mtmws which the Javanese suppose to be Kawi. Gericke compares beh 

 <nxm^\ which means in composition tliirty. Fr.) 



Kabel ëjog, got into difficulties about any thing; done, cheated, swindled. Said of any- 

 thing which we undertake and cannot fulfil. 



K a b ë n ë r a n , as it so turns out , as chance will have it ; luckily. Any thing that comes apropos. 



Kabësékën, to have a husky cough caused by anything getting into the throat and 

 sticking there, as dust or any small partiele. 



Kabët, distracted, attention drawn away by something else than what we ought to be 

 attending to. Perplexed. 



Kabëubëuhëulan, unable to void excrement. 



Kabëuki, whatever we desire; the thing desired or wished for. Kabëuki na ka na lauh 

 munding , BufFaloe flesh is just what he likes. 



Kabëulit, entanglecl by a rope or string getting twisted rouncl it. 



Kabëurëuyan, said when a bone or other impediment sticks in the throat. 



Kabias, to be cast away at sea; drifted from one's course: to lose oneself in a forest. See Bias. 



Kabina, exceedingly , in a high degree, generally said of something bad. Kabina bina 

 tëtiyn , that is excessively bad ; that is to bad ! 



Kabirëung'o, espied, discovered with the eye, viewed, beheld , inspected. 



Kabiri, gelded, castrated. Këbo kabiri, a gelded buffaloe. Hayam habiri , a capon. 

 Kabiri is also said of trees and plants , the tops of which are nipped oiï to make them 

 grow more luxuriantly side-ways, as Tobacco, CofYee trees &c. &c. Biri, C. Page 

 473 is a woman , a wife. With the constructive Ka before it would imply icomanized. 

 If this derivation is true . we would be led to the conclusion that the Islanders learnt 

 the art of gelding from the Indians of the continent. (57.) 



(57) Biri is no Scr. word; fihiru, means fearful, and the feminine a timid woman. The Scr. words 

 for castrated mean hoving lost the testides, theyare according to Williams, English and Sanscrit 



