This page has returned 34 entries
ma
adj. ripe, as fruit; healed, as a wound; also "mah"
bookmarkmac
n. cup (mug)
bookmarkmafure mafutoga
n. an astronomy term; no definition given
bookmarkmak
adj. smooth, applied to sugarcane-leaf thatch
bookmarkmako amyiñ

n. tree to 5 m, fdby 35 cm (collection: Michael J. Balick #4979)
Example: The fruits are edible and ripen during November-December. The leaves can be boiled as a medicine. If a person has a hoarse voice, boil 4 or or a few more leaves in 1 liter of water. Cool the mixture and drink once daily until the voice returns to normal. The trunk of this tree is good for timber, as it is a very hard wood. But a productive tree is not cut for timber--only the wild mangos that have flowers and small fruits that do not ripen; these trees are cut for timber. This particular tree, "Mango Amgie" bears fruit with a great deal of fiber, so the name refers to the "mango that you drink." Amgie means "drink" in the Aneityum language. There is another variety of mango, "Mango Cig" that means the mango that you eat. It has a little fiber but good fleshy fruits. This species is introduced from outside of Aneityum.
bookmarkmanfara
n. kind of sugarcane
bookmarkmaprum

maprum

maputu-ligighap
n. the stem of a coconut leaf used for a butt
bookmarkmaranapa
n. kind of banana
bookmarkmasoa
n. arrowroot
bookmarkmasoa

n. herb to 1 m, fruits green (collection: Michael J. Balick #4915)
Example: This plant was said to have been brought in by the early missionaries, used to starch their clothes and grown as a crop for export to England. Used as a food crop as well, the root is mashed, dried in the sun and kept until needed. To process, put the roots in a bowl, add water and soak for 1 day and night, pour off the water and keep the starch. Prepare this food like lap-lap that is cooked on a fire in a pan.
bookmarkmasoa

n. sterile herb, juvenile form (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3438)
Example: This plant is used as a starchy food. To prepare it, grarte it into a dish, wash with water, the starch settles to the bottom, pour off the water, dry the starch in the sun and make it into a powder. The starch can be cooked with coconut milk and eaten.
bookmarkmedipmedip
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarkmetagi asori
n. kind of taro
bookmarkmeto
adj. ripe; also "metto"
bookmarkm̃orom̃ora
[ŋmoroŋmora] n. ants
bookmarkmure
adj. ripe, as arrowroot; also "murre"
bookmarkmuri muri

muri muri
