536 A DICTIONARY SUNDANESE 



Out of the question. Jélema na midu jasah , the man is most wretchedly poor. Ma- 

 tak wudu, it will make ifc quite impossible. 



Wujuk, coaxing, flattery, chousing. Dl ivujuk, to coax, to flatter. 



W u 1 u , the same as Wulu , a hair of the body. 



Wulu, to perform ablution before prayers. Wulusan , in Kawi : water , Koorda van Eysinga. 



Wuluan, having hair on the body. Possessed of property. 



Wulung, black. Aioi wulung , the same as Awi hideung , the black bambu , from its colour, 

 a useful bambu. Bambusa nigra. Wulung is black in Javanese. 



Wun, destitute, in miserable circumstances. Jélema na wun sakali, the man is perfectly 

 destitute. Probably the same as Wun, C. 476, broken, fractured, torn, rent. 



Wungku, the circle round a sieve, or flat basket, made of bambu or split wood. The 

 cïrcle which distends the sieve. 



Wungkul, entire, whole, solely. Pare na nu nyésa, Wunglcul hadébai, the paddy which 

 remains , is entirely good. Sa-paro iyo wungkul ajang sia , this half is entirely for you. 



Wuruk, di wuruk, to get information or instruction. 



Wurung, also Burung, which see. Not carried through, abandoned; given up before 

 it is completed. Abortive. Coming to nothing. Pagawéan éta jadi wurung , that work 

 has been given up as a bad job , has come to nothing. 



Wurungan, name of a common bush with white floral leaf, and small red flower. Mu- 

 saenda Glabra. Also called Kingkilapan, which see. Called Wurungan, that which mis- 

 carries, which comes to nothing, from an ancient saga connected with the story of 

 the Tangkuban Prahu. So called from its white floral leaves having deceived those 

 who were damming up the Chitarum river in the Preanger Regencies. They aban- 

 doned their work in dispair , which is still supposed to beseen in the Séngyang Tikoro. 



Wurung kën, to cause to be abortive, to cause to come to nothing, to disappoint, to 

 abandon. To render abortive, to nullify, to annul. 



Wuta, occurs in a certain form of Jampé, and means: not to be known, hidden. It 

 is evidently a modification of the Malay word Buta, blind. See Suku and Buta. 



Wuwuluh, the barrel part of a gun, considered as separate or apart from the stock. 



Wuwung, and Wuwungan, hateup used in roofing, and overhanging or overlapping at 

 top, or on the ridge pole, so as to cover it in. The whole apparatus hateup s , injuk, 

 ropes and prods on a ridge-pole are called Tongkob. 



Wuwunyi-ëun, worms in the bellies of animals, especially of horses. Said when an 

 animals gut's growl. Derived from Bunyi, to sound, to make a noise. 



Y. 



Ya, yes , a vulgar affirmative. 



Yahudi, Arabic, a Jew , Israëli te. Jewish. 



Yaisun, I, the personal pronoun of the first person. Properly Javanese ; heard in Jampés. 



