An example search has returned 100 entries
achachadaliek
adj. tempestuous at sea
bookmarkelum
v. to begin to form, as fruit
bookmarketcei nohon
n. beat coconut fiber
bookmarkincejev ataheñ
inhachac
inholai mobo
n. Brown Chub, Grey Sea Chub, Grey Drummer
Example: Photo by John Turnbull, License: CC BY-SA 3.0 via Fishes of Australia
bookmarkinhupau
inhutlavlav
n. a bamboo flute
bookmarkinlelitai
n. bush land; uncultivated land
bookmarkinlopot jap
n. shrub to 1 m, flower white (collection: Michael J. Balick #4866)
Example: When making a taro patch, and removing soil, add the leaves of this plant to the soil to fertilize the taro, and prevent the bottom part of the taro from rotting. Put a layer of leaves on the bottom of the patch before planting taro and covering with soil.
bookmarkinmadidi
inmehei ipciv
n. kind of banana
bookmarkinmeraducai
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarkinmerimri
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarkinmouwat
inp̃al anhas
intaig apig
n. kind of taro
bookmarkintaig cap
n. kind of taro
bookmarkintaigana
n. kind of taro
bookmarkintejed
n. tree. Growing in village garden. (collection: Ashley A McGuigan #22)
Example: 1. Timber for houses, hard wood. 2. Fruits have a highly desirable nut that is edible when fresh after cracking the fruit. 3. Medicine – 5 young tips, boiled in 3 cups of water, and steam eyes when have conjunctivitis. 1x. 3. Calendar plant – When the leaves turn red and are ready to fall off from the tree – the lobsters are ready to be harvested – best time to harvest lobsters. Firm tasty meat. This was a traditional population management so that lobsters were not harvested year around but only during this season, Oct–Nov, for a month or 1.5 months.
bookmarkintisiancai
n. blossom (open)
bookmarkinwowityuwun
irai ohatag
n. celestial
bookmarkmanfara
n. kind of sugarcane
bookmarkmuri muri
nadeni
n. the name of a prickly shrub
bookmarknahaijcai
n. kind of plant, grass, or fern
bookmarknahod
nahraren nepig
n. dawn of day
bookmarknaipomyiv ~ naipomñiv
name cedo
namumuatamag
n. epiphyte on fallen tree, growing in disturbed forest. Fruit. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3474)
Example: When children feel weak, this is a good medicine for them. Squeeze the leaves and give the child (3-5 years of age) one tea spoon of the juice and it is said to make them strong again.
bookmarknapalhat
n. vine, growing on rocks at end of strand near coastal forest. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3690)
Example: As a medicine to treat toothache, the latex from this vine is put into the tooth as soon as the person feels pain. Use 3x daily until the pain has subsided. The flower is used as a decoration behind the ear. When there are rough seas because someone has trespassed in a tabu area you can take 12 leaves from the napalhat and put them in a pond for about 1 week until they start to stink. Then use we leaves from the naojapdak and drown those leaves in either a fresh water pond or salty water. (No further information given). Can also take an armful of napalhat and place on top of a stone in the tabu area with a smaller stone on top of the napaphat. The stone must be a large permanent stone. Has also heard people say it can be used for toothache if you put the leaf on the tooth.
bookmarknapapotan
napjis
n. a species of grass
bookmarknapod
n. kind of tree
bookmarknap̃od
narasitai
n. chaff
bookmarknaravi
n. a gathering of inmops or horse-chestnuts
bookmarknatji
natoga u inmeijcop
n. wind-related term; no definition provided
bookmarknauhoig yi amud
n. break of day
bookmarkneduon
n. low mountain
bookmarknegrecreipek
nehlan
n. a shrub, a plant, a sucker
bookmarknekeiatimi
n. terrestrial fern, growing on rocky area in secondary forest above the river. Leaves c. 3 m long. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3654)
Example: The leaf is wrapped around the head as an adornment by both men and women. If a person gets burned by a fire, scrape the petiole of this plant and squeeze juice on the wound to cool and heal it. Use as long as needed. The ancestors are said to have cooked the stump of this plant in an earth oven, over 2-3 nights, and then ate it. It is said to have no taste but was more of a famine food during periods of drought.
bookmarknelda
n. kind of plant, grass, or fern
bookmarknicasau
n. the castor-oil plant
bookmarknihivaeñ aeyhec
nijin nedoon
n. brow of a hill
bookmarknijom hubou
nilpodou
n. herb, growing at edge of garden area. Flowers yellow. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3599)
Example: This is for a medicinal tea to give energy to a person who is not feeling well. Collect a handful of young stem apices and boil in 2-3 cups of water. Drink warm to help the body be strong and healthy. It is also good to treat diarrhea. When a person feels well again, stop this treatment but they can also drink this 1x daily, once before breakfast or before lunch, as a healthful tea.
bookmarkniri atga
nirid u numu
n. terrestrial fern on forest floor, growing in disturbed forest. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3482)
Example: People who go fishing take this plant along with other unspecified leaves, crush them and rub them on the fishing line that the person is using. This is said to attract more fish to the bait. It is also a "message plant" to be put in a person’s hat when they come back from fishing and then people know that they caught fish. Local name means "fish gill." For performing a weather magic ritual to produce fog, this plant is fermented along with another plant (nap̃at) in a hole in a sacred stone (called "Naemoso") at a secret location on Aneityum.
bookmarknispev
n sea snake
bookmarknoducnas
n. a bunch of taro
bookmarknohun
n. stem
bookmarknomrop̃om̃
nomyatamain
n. Thumbprint emperor, blackspot emperor
Example: Photo by ANFC, License: CC BY-NC 3.0 via Fishes of Australia
bookmarknop̃ou
n. large epiphyte on dead tree, growing in open forest. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3478)
Example: The wood of this plant is very hard and can be used for house posts. Because the wood is somewhat heavy, younger stems can be sharpened at one end and the pole can be used to plant dryland taro, to make holes for the tubers. For planting swamp taro, the leaves can be used to line the pit that the taro is planted in; it is a local fertilizer for the taro, and as it rots the soil becomes soft while the taro is growing. The flowers are placed behind one’s ear to enjoy the fragrance or can also be used to make a floral necklace (Intañ).
bookmarknuarin adalamak
n. plain
bookmarknuarin marara
n. dale
bookmarknugnyiobod
n. kind of plant, grass, or fern
bookmarknup̃ut
simi
adv. down here; also "sime"
bookmarktilaconai
n. first quarter of the moon
bookmark


