AND ENGLISH. 237 



Kutang, a short jacket without sleeves, but buttoning down the front like a European's 

 waistcoat. ( Also a waistcoat of woraen , worn under the Kabaja , buttoned and cove- 

 ring the breast. Mal. id. Jav. Kotang. Fr.) 



Kut el, foolish , daft 



Kutil, a wart, an excrescence on the skin. (Jav. idem.) 



Kutu, a louse; aflea; Kutu jélërna, a louse on ahuman being, Pecliculus. Kutu anjing , a 

 flea on a dog. Kuiu hayam , a flea on a fowl. In these two last senses , the Kutu is 

 a Pulex. (Mal. idem. Jav. every kind of small animals. Gericke.) 



Kut uk, a curse, damnation; Si kutuk, the accursed one, the damned fellow. KutuJc Al- 

 lah , the curse of God. 



Kutuk-bluk, the owl, more frequently called Kuhubluh. 



Kutura, a bud , a fiower bud. 



K u t u n g , a short jacket with What are called short sleeves , which only reach to the wrists ; 

 whereas a native's idea of full sleeves is that they will pull well over the hands. (See 

 Kuiang.) 



Kutung, maimed so that the stump of leg, arm or finger remains. (Bat. idem.) 



Ku-ud, Arabic, sitting, remaining in one place on ocassion of praying. (j.^, Kuüd, the 



act of sitting.) 



Ku-uk, a big full-grown Onggrét. Also the beetle which is often found among old horse 

 or buffaloe dung: in this latter sense it is a Geotrupes. 



K u w a 1 i , name of a place in the Eegency of Galu in Cheribon , where some ancient in- 

 scriptions have been found. The word will admit of the following solution. Ku C. 126 

 an indeclinable partiele of deprecation , implying sin, guilt; reproach; contempt, mean- 

 ness. JFali, C. 628, wild, living in a forest. Ku-wali, a vile person living in the 

 woods, say perhaps some unorthodox sage, who had retired to the solitude of the fo- 

 rest, and hence called sometimes Sanghyang Kuwali, as reported by Raden Sa léh. Tijd- 

 schrift voor land- taal- en volkenkunde 1854? Jaargang 2 aflev. 2. Page 155, in the 

 same wayas Kmoéra which see. It may somewhat tend to confirm our acceptation of waii, 

 living in the forest, that no temple or ruins of any buildings have been found near 

 the inscribëd stones. (But there lias been a Iïuta! Fr.) 



Kuwëng, a name given to the Oah monkey, being an imitation of its cry. 



Kuwéra, C. 133 from Ku, bad, vile, and ivéra, body. The Indian Plutus, the god of 

 wealth. The name of the deity alludes to his deformity, he being represented as ha- 

 ving three legs and only eight teeth. See Soma. 



Kuwuk, a sea shell in some varieties. Cypraea and Oliva. 



Kuwung-Kuwungan, the rainbow. Called also Kungkuwung. In Malay called Kun$, 

 Marsden Page 274-. 



Knya, a fresh water turtle or tortoise , found in the inland rivers. 



Kuya-batu, a smaller vai'iety of the above, in swampy places or on dry land. 



