"222 A DICTIONARY SUNDANESE 



and leave the tree bare , as trees in winter in Europe. See II yang : thus to this tree has 

 been ascribed supernatural power, from the fact of its becoming bare, as if dead , and 

 then coming to life again. 



Ki-hiyëur, a variety of wild chesnut or Castanea. Fruit not eaten. See Sanintën and 

 Kalimborot. 



Kihkir, a file, a rasp. Miserly, avaricious. (Malay, Batavian id. Jav. only a file , a rasp.) 



Ki-hura, a variety of diminutive palm tree. 



lv i - i h , to piddle , to make water. 



Tvijing, abivalve shell fish , found in fresh water ponds, and muddy ditches. It is a mus- 

 cle of about three inches long, and one and a half inch across. 



Iviju, Cheese. Queijo, Cheese in Portuguese. 



Ki-julang, a red wood used for gobang sheaths , brought from the south coast of Bantam. 



lvi-kendung, a plant producing a pod like a bean. 



Iv i k i s , a fence made of split bambu wattled together , set round gardens &c, and espe- 

 cially used in native towns or large villages to set on each side of the road , so as 

 to shut out the view of dirty homesteads. 



Tvi-konéng, a wild turmeric , grows wild in grasslands, and small jungles. Vide Koneng. 



lvilang, viz. Siréum kilang, name of a small brown ant found on the ground. 



Kilap, to shine, to glitter. (Jav. Kawi. Kélap. Malay, Batavian Kilap which means also 

 lightning. Fr.) 



Ivi-lého, litterally, the snot plant. A genus of plants with several species. They have all 

 white flowers growing immediately out of the stem of the tree , and which may have 

 suggested the not very elegant name which it bears. They are called by Blume Saurauja, 

 which ought to have been Sauravia. The bark of the Kilêho tree is used for tying 

 round the ends of the Kawung fruit branches , when cut off for the purpose of getting 

 the toddy, as it is thought that they draw out the frothy juice or snot which first 

 comes out, and which will not boil to sugar. 



Kili Suchi, daughter of Déwa Kusuma, a sovereign of Eastern Java in the commence- 

 ment of the lOth. century. She was the oldest of the family and remaining unmarried, 

 performed a conspicuous part in the transactions of those days. To her is also ascri- 

 bed the construction of the temples of Singa Sari. She was aunt to the celebrated 

 Panji. The reason of her never marrying was that she was not after the habit of other 

 women; which her name expresses. Kili , C. 125 the menstrual flux. Suchi, C. 745, 

 white, clean, cleansed, purified. Thus clean of the flux, or free from it. The scène 

 of her adventures is connected with E$diri. Kaffles Vol. 2. Page 88. Kili Suchi wished 

 to sacrifice herself on the funeral pile of her parents , but it was not permitted her so 

 to do. Kaffles Vol. 2 Page 77. 



Ivilungan, to pretend ignorance, to pretend not to know. 



K i m a , the large sea shell Chama gigas , abundant on the South coast of Bantam , howe- 

 ver , in comparatively small varieties. 



