AND ENGLISH. 495 



Teun deun, to put, to place. To stow away, to lay by. To put away for future use. 

 Tëundëut, and Tëundëutkën, to ram in, tocause, to pierce, to stab. Peso teundeut , 



a dagger , a knife for stabbing. 

 Tëunëung, daring, fearless, bold. 

 Tëunggëul, to strike , to lick , to wallop, to thrash. 

 T ë u p a , to work iron , to work as a blacksmith. 

 Tëurak, to take effect, to make an impression , to leave a mark, to hit. Ku gobang aing 



mohal to teurak, with my weapon you may be sure it will cut. Batu di teurakkeh 



ka kebo, stones so thrown that they hit buffaloes. To neurale , it did not hit. 

 Tëurap, to belch, to eructate wind from the throat. 

 Tëurëui, to swallow, to gulp down. 

 Tëurëup, name of a tree, Artocarpus Elastica. The bark is very stringy, and makes 



tough durable rope. The leaf is large and deeply indented , especially when the 



tree is young. 

 Tëurëup arëui, name of a tree, Ficus Depressa. 

 Tëuwël, a diminutive black bee with white face. It makes its nest in any small holes 



about woodwork or in walls and has honey. Sting trifling. 

 Tëuwëuk, or Tëwëk, to stab, to run a weapon or instrument endways into any object. 

 Tëuyn, in excessive degree, very, too. Panjang teuyn, too long. Pondok teuyn, too 



short. Haliwu teuyn, very much disturbance. Teuyn éta ma, that is too bad; that 



is in quite an excessive degree. Ku teuyn, I cannot endure it; it is too bad. Also too 



good, surprisingly good. In an excessive degree. 

 Té wak, to seize , to catch hold of. To catch , to snatch at. Néwak kotok , to catch a 



fowl. Di téwak eukeur hiber, he caught it as it fiew past. 

 Ti, from. Ti mana, from where, where do you come from? Ti imah, from home. 



Ti jauh, from a distance. Ti is extensively used in the formation of some compound 



words, of which examples may be seen below, though the crude root, from which 



such words are derived , it not always manifest , or may have become obsolete. It 



often indicates a verbal active form , as Guling, rolling in a heap , laid at length , 



Tigiding , to roll, to run off by rolling. Vide Tinchak. 

 Tiap, every, each. Mostly used in the duplicated form , Tiap-tiap. Tiap-tiap poi, every 



day. Tiap-tiap jélema , each in.dividual man. 

 Ti ba, if only; if by way of exception; if by chance. Tiba siji hadé, di ala, if there 



was but one good, I would take it. Tiba meunang nu gedë, if by chance we could get 



a large one. 

 Tibah, to fall upon , to drop from a height and hit. Buah kadu ragrag , tibali ka hutu 



jélema, a durian-fruit dropped and feil upon the head of a man. This word would 



appear to be derived from Ti, which see, and Balia, C. 466, placed, fixed, put, 



settled. 

 Tibahkën, to fling out, to scatter. To fling upon, to impose upon, to apportion. To 



