232 A DICTIONARY SUNDANESE 



to the end of a horse of wood , over which the cocoanuts , when split in two , are rasped 



Kukuruyuk, to crowasacock, to coo as a dove; lience a dove is called Tikukur. Seems 

 to have a common origin "with Kuhula, C. 127, a cock. 



Kukus, to burn incense to heathen or imaginary divinities. To distil. 



Kukut, to bring up the infant of another person; to act as parents to a helpless clüld. To 

 take care of the young of any animal which lias died or disappeared leaving its off- 

 spring helpless. To foster, to nurse, to cherish. 



Kula, I, the personal pronoun of the first person. It isneitherthe highest nor the low- 

 est designation of self, and is thus the most general in use among equals, and con- 

 veys an idea of deference to the person addressed. The use of Aing places the spea- 

 ker above the person addressed, and kuring below hira. Kula, C. 132 afamily, race, 

 tribe or caste. May tliis word have been adopted by the Sundas as a personal pro- 

 noun, thereby designating one of the same caste or family, see Aing, and hence the 

 idea , ■which it still conveys of some degree of equality , although of deference to the 

 party addressed. 



Ivulak, a measure in which the priest receives the Pitrah or Labaran dues. See Pitrah, 

 This measure ia esclusively confined to this operation ; about three Kulak's are one 

 Qantang. 



Kulat, semen virile, et etiam lubricatio feminis. 



Kulëm, to sleep, asleep; a very elegant and refined expression. 



Kuli, a paid labourer, as contradistinguisked from one who gets nothing, but lias to work 

 feudal service; generally called throughout India- a cooly. Kuli, C. 133. hire, wages. 



Ivulikën, to do any work with paid labourers. 



Ivulia, entire, every where. Sakulialiduwja, the entire world. Sa kuliah jagat, through- 

 out the whole land. 



Kuliling, around, turning round and round, around and about without having any ap- 

 parent occupation. 



Kulilingan, to surround, to encompass, to work round. 



Kul inch ir, circular marks, or disposition of the hair either in man or anirnals. Erom 

 the kulinchir natives pretend to draw omens, or form an opinion of the merits of a 

 horse or of a buffaloe. 



K u 1 i s i k , to turn the body , to get up , to arise from sleeping. 



Kulisik-kulisik, moving gently or making a small noise, as of a person or animal 

 movino- stealthilv. 



Kulit, skin, Inde, leather; bark, rind, husk, shell. Kulit jélema , a man's skin. Kulit 

 kèlo, a buftalce hide. Kulit asak, cooked hide- leather. Kulit kayu, bark of a tree. 

 Kulit buwah, rind or husk of fruit. Kulit pinyu, tortoise shell. 



Kul on, the west. It appears to be compounded of the word Hulu head, as Ka-liulu-an, 

 by a familiar process is contracted into Kulon. From this we must infer that the word 

 had its origin in Java ; and it is not a little odd that the ÏVest-end of Java shoukl 



