An example search has returned 100 entries
-ko
affix yonder; away from
bookmarkared numta
v. to plant taro
bookmarkarijai
v.n. to go ashore, to go from sea, to arise or overflow, as sea over land.
bookmarkhui asan
v. trees; fruit
bookmarkincet edwa
incipñekrei
inmaefata
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarkinmehtas
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarkinmoijeuv an nofomot
inrukdum nohos
n. kind of banana
bookmarkintaig apig
n. kind of taro
bookmarkintinan tal
n. a plantation of taro
bookmarkintop̃ asiej
inwah
n. food or seed of all sorts; the juice of any plant
bookmarkinwouse
inya
n. large tree, 16 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3222)
Example: 1. As a child’s game, some times children put the segments of the needles together to see who can make the largest one. 2. A "calendar plant"--when the needles are brown, it is an indication that people should not work hard, but should rest or they will not feel well. If they try to work they will feel sleepy--an indication of the season of higher heat. 3. Wood is used as firewood. 4. Firewood, inner bark good for ciguatera poisoning, scratch the inner bark and squeeze juice into a cup of water and give to the sick person to drink – very effective. Use the largest most mature part of the stem.
bookmarkinyac
n. kind of plant, grass, or fern
bookmarkinyat
n. tree, 10 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3645)
Example: The ripe fruits of this plant are edible and said to be delicious as well as smell very good. When the fruits turn brown and soft you can open it and there will be a shell like an upsidedown turtle shell. You can eat the fruit out. As the fruit smells good, people put a basket of ripe fruits in their homes to give it a good smell. The unripe fruits can be eaten, but only when cooked in an earth oven so it is not sticky. The tree can be used for sawn timber. Can be used for building house, specifically the house posts. Number one timber.
bookmarkitu acen
adv. a long time ago
bookmarkkaias elauoh
n. kind of taro
bookmarkmaprum
meto
adj. ripe; also "metto"
bookmarkmuri muri
nacñanp̃aiñ
nadoni
n. prickly shrub
bookmarknafanu
n. tree, 3-4 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3570)
Example: This plant grows in coastal areas, and is a good source of firewood. It can be used for house posts. The leaves are used as an unspecified medicine. There is a belief regarding the black and white sea snake, that represents a seawater spirit. Mix this with other unspecified leaves, mash together, squeeze into a bamboo tube and fill it. Give it to a woman to drink to keep the evil snake spirit away. The same preparation can be used to treat toothache, caused by the seawater spirit. "The spirit can trick you into going to fish every day."
bookmarknahed u paralecei
nahrarin nepig
n. early morning; around 3 o’clock
bookmarknahrin
n. half-tide when ebbing
bookmarknajgou
n. Orange-spotted emperor, yellowtail emperor
Example: Photo by FAO / Fishbase, License: CC BY-NC 3.0 via Fishes of Australia
bookmarknakli pece
n. isle, island
bookmarknalad iran
n. seed of a fig
bookmarknamehe
n. kind of taro
bookmarknametreyeñ
namrad
nanad
narutu umlai
n. wind-related term; no definition provided
bookmarknathut an nadiat
n. near morning
bookmarknatji
nauanieg
n. reed
bookmarkneaig
n. the kernel of a coconut; the coconut tree
bookmarkneaig cap
n. a red coconut
bookmarknedenc
n. stinging; the fruit of the kaleteug
bookmarkneduodo
n. kind of tree
bookmarknefetgau
n. kind of sugarcane
bookmarknehtet upaipai
n. kind of sugarcane
bookmarknelas
nelmai
n. a tree from the inner rind of which fishing lines and nets are made. na elmai or elumai, cloth
bookmarknetigi
nidupau
n. kind of tree
bookmarknijig an nepig
n. midnight; also "nijihgan nepig"
bookmarknimtinjap
n. wind
bookmarkniña
[niŋa] n. shell
bookmarkniʧin neiang
nohos yau
nosjacai
n. Two-striped sweetlips, giant sweetlips
Example: Photo by Ross D. Robertson / Shorefishes of the Neotropics, License: CC BY-SA 3.0 via Fishes of Australia
bookmarknuae
nucije
n. Sirius, the Dog Star
bookmarknumurumu
n. epiphyte on Syzygium tree, growing in secondary forest along trail above river. old fruits. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3660)
Example: Put several leaves of this species together to wrap food, especially the fresh water eel, and to carry plants of taro, kava, holding the leaves over one’s shoulder to carry these crops. Used as a baby’s remedy for when the baby is crying too much because the parents are having to much sex. The baby will also be slow to grow and be thin. To remedy this, must wash the baby with the following mixture: nekei atimi (bark), nohos atimi (green skin of the stem), nepnatimi ataman (part not specified). Scrap about 1 inch cubed of the nekei atimi into your hand along with 1in x 4in of the first layer of the green skin of the banana stem (nohos atimi), and the top 8 leaves from about two separate branches of the nepnatimi ataman. Bind all ingredients together and pound them and put everything in the baby’s water for bathing. Wash the baby in water made with this mixture. Do not wipe the baby dry but let it air dry. The next day when you wash the baby with soap, you must re-wash them with the mixture again. Do this for 5 days with the same water mixture. It may small bad but that is okay. Finally on day 5, take the juice from the outter layer of skin on the stem of the banana, nohos atimi, and give a full spoonful of the juice to the baby to drink. Other plants can be added to the bathing water but these are the three primary ingredients.
bookmarknup inceen
n. the rib of a leaf
bookmarkpok ko
adv. seaward yonder
bookmarkrohalrohal
adj. rough, applied to sugarcane-leaf thatch
bookmarkugnis
v.a. to take off sprouts of taro
bookmarkuhup a nelgo waj


