1881.] 
VOCABULARY. 
181 
BB, — BB (1) and( 2), q. v. 
B?TU, a kind of prickly fish. 
BB, adj. crooked; Prov. *f 
'STT^ft, ^JI«TT BB, you do not know 
how to walk, and you blame the 
unevenness of the courtyard. 
B^, to note : to notice. 
B^B, the act of taking note of any 
particular thing : a thief 
notes houses in which he can com¬ 
mit a theft on the following 
night). (Sal. X), BBB rqiT, to go 
about noting houses (as a thief). 
Bq«i = BBB, q. V. 
w, (i) a grove of trees, a wood. 
BT3T, (2) v. a. to ask, to question. 
BWBr = TBf^T, q. V. 
Bf^iBT^, one who asks; cf BefT^TB. 
BpqB, an application to prevent the 
recurrence of ague. It is com¬ 
posed of certain leaves and medi¬ 
cines wrapped together , and is 
fastened to the feet or limbs. 
BT^T, a quarter of a town, a village : 
BT% Bi-if (I 1 . 70), in every quarter 
of the town. 
BNiR^T, adj. unlooked for: unno¬ 
ticed. 
z 
B^jR B^t;, a fixed residence, a home, 
rid. LXXXI, 4 ; cf. sfc. 
B3T, or BTT, a robber: an assassin. 
adj. robbed. 
bbR, a worker in brass : Prov. bbIt 
BB fu Bft two workers 
in brass never traffic together, 
(for if they did it would be 
“ Diamond cut diamond”). 
BTTB, ( fern .) barren, (of a woman or 
female animal). 
BTB, the bamboo frame of a thatch, 
or of a mat house. [to stand. 
BTB(l), adj. standing erect. BTB 
BTf (2), BTfB^T, v. n. (Indecl. Part. 
(Sal- X.)yw* BTflr), to stand : 
to stand still. 
BTB^, the act of standing. 
BIB, v. a. to drag : to hold fast, to 
grasp ; cfTTR 5T«T (P. 17), to fast. 
BT«?B, pulling. 
BUT, BTUT, a place : appearance, form. 
(Vid. II, 2, and XXXVIII, 6, BT^f 
for loc BTB). 
BTfu, the branch of a tree ; Prov. 
btk^t sr-sr, ^ifrcjr 
Vj ■J 
RT^TB, a monkey fallen from a 
branch, is like a cultivator who 
loses the crops of his field. 
bW, adj. and adv. exact: exactly. 
BlBTT, a contract, piece-work. 
B3IK, adj. one who refuses pertina¬ 
ciously to obey orders, obstinate. 
B^TTBT, (P 31), a fixture, an appoint¬ 
ment. 
BB, or BBF, adj. pure, genuine. 
BB, the act of stumbling: Prov. 
BTT Wfrf, SRcf* 
he stumbled over a mountain, and 
(out of revenge) smashed his curry 
stone ; BB stum- 
vj • 
bling increases a man’s careful¬ 
ness. 
B^T, a word without definite mean¬ 
ing, attached to B1R, see B^K 
