AND ENGLISH. 209 



Katunchar, Coriander seed. Coriandrum sativum. (64). 



Katung, a joint of bambu tied up to the Pager or wall of a native house, in whicli small 

 valuables are kept. 



Katunggu, watclied, guarded, to be kept in order, properly superintended. 



Katung ku, said of a buffaloe which appears to be ailing, and which it is thouglit pru- 

 dent to kill for fear of its dying, whereby the flesh would be lost, if the aniraal was 

 not killed according to Mohammedan rites. 



Ka tut, going in at the bargaiu; sold along with something else. Bêas di juwal katut 

 jêtmg Jcarung na, the rice was sold along with the bag. 



Katuwon, inward sorrow, regret. 



Ka-ubër, roused up, stirred up, put to rout. 



Kaul, arabic. Marsden. A written agreement, contract, engagement. (Jy, Qaul, a saying, 



word.) 

 Kaula, I, I myself. A humble designation of self, whereby the speaker places himselfbe- 



low the person whora he adresses. Itisstill more humble than Kula, of which it seems 



to be a modification. 

 Kaulkën, to make a promise or engagement. 



SC-- 



Kaum, arabic, an assembly of priests or men met for the purpose of prayer. (,J Qaum, 



people.) 

 Kaur, having time, having leisure. To kaur , I have no time. (Kalwr Jav. time, leisure.) 

 Kaus, a stocking, such as worn by Europeans. It is the Dutch word kous, stocking. 

 Kawa, the Crater of a Volcano. Kawa, C. 115, a circle. Perhaps the name was applied 



to the craters of Volcanoes from their being generally circular openings on the tops of 



the mountains. (Perhaps a derivation from the Scr. root ku, to sound. Fr.) 

 Kawa Domas, name of one of the craters on the Tangkuban Prahu. 

 Kawah, a large cooking pan, a sugarpan. This and the precending word appear to be 



distinct, though so nearly allied in both sound an sense. The latter word, however, 



is always aspirated at the end which the other is not. 

 Kawai, the Baju or jacket of a native nobleman. 

 Kawalahan, overdone with work; having more trouble and work than can be got 



through ; overtasked. 

 Kawalu, and Ka wal u tutug, are great festivals of the Baclui heathens in South Bantam. 



This Kawalu sounds like a Sunda form of the Javanese Wolu , Eight , and thus kaïca- 



(64) Jav. Malay Eatumbar. There is a very remarkable exchaDge bet-ween b en ch in Malay and 

 Sundanese. See Changkudu to Mal. BangTcudu ; Changkivang - Bangkwang. The letters B en Ch seeming 

 to be very distant from each other, must have been considered or rather feit by the natives to be 

 cognate. I know no Analogon of their exchange in other languages , who are cognate to each other , 

 they are the one a Media the other a ïenuis of another class, Fr. 



27 



