An example search has returned 100 entries
aelan panadol
ahwai lelcai
v. to plant weeds; to make a wilderness or a waste
bookmarkapuhod pan nathut an nadiat
n. near morning
bookmarkatga nethanethan
v. passed by on the other side
bookmarkehmehma
adj. healed, applied to wounds; ripe; yellow
bookmarkfetofeto
igcahi
n. landward
bookmarkigcaijai
n. a place up or eastward
bookmarkincei imtaig
n. the heart wood of a tree
bookmarkincei u nasuantan
n. herb to 1 m, flowers blue. In transitional zone from pine forest to ’primary’ forest. (collection: Michael J. Balick #4982)
Example: This is used to treat Ciguatera disease when a person eats fish that is contaminated. Squeeze juice from a handful of leaves of this herb into a cup, add a small amount of water, and drink 1 cup once a day for 3 days, or continue until the person feels better. This illness is a problem on Aneityum with the reef fish. It is better to eat fish that are farther out to sea. This treatment is also used for dogs who eat contaminated fish. Make the same preparation and forcibly pour this in their mouth as they will not drink it willingly. Do this treatment once daily until the dog feels better. The dogs get this illness because they are fed the scraps, especially the bones of the fish, and this is thought to be where the disease is found. This is considered to be a dangerous illness and dogs who get it frequently die.
bookmarkincepñekrei
inceslum
n. vegetables; herbs, as taro, bananas; every vegetable planted for food
bookmarkinmaefata
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarkinmeri
n. a stringy bark tree
bookmarkinmerimri
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarkinmerinwai
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarkinmohoc onubidou
inʧatamain
lawog
masoa
n. arrowroot
bookmarkmedipmedip
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarknabou
n. Yellowmargin triggerfish
Example: Photo by Mark Rosenstein / iNaturalist.org, License: CC BY-SA 3.0 via Fishes of Australia
bookmarknaceijo
n. half tide when rising
bookmarknafakeka
n. coconut spathes
bookmarknaherumaig
n. mimosa (plant)
bookmarknahoacen
n. vine to 3-4 m, aerial tubers brown (collection: Michael J. Balick #4872)
Example: Normally these fruits are considered poisonous. But, people have learned to peel off the skin of the fruits, put the peeled fruits in a conical basked and place a bamboo tube that is dripping water over it to wash the basket of fruits for 3-5 days. This is said to leach out the poison and the end result is similar in consistency to cheese. Wrap this up with leaves and put it in an earth oven to cook. This plant is eaten as a "starvation food" only, consumed in times of drought and famine.
bookmarkname cedo
namrop̃om
n. tree, 7-8 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3582)
Example: Firewood, timber good for bush houses. Calendar plant – when it is in flower, the old people know it is time to harvest root crops, like yam and other vine crops, in the wild, as yet unspecified. Local names = INYAC, NOMODEJ TAL, NOMODEJ WOU, NOU LELCEI… etc.
bookmarknapat
n. a cloud, blackness, darkness
bookmarknapuig
n. a reed frame for supporting the tendrils of yams
bookmarknara
n. kind of tree
bookmarknarasitai
n. chaff
bookmarknasjiñao
natu
n. grass; little bushes
bookmarknau inwai
n. channel of a stream
bookmarknaualha
n. kind of plant, grass, or fern
bookmarknauhwa
n. kind of tree
bookmarknauram milmat
n. kind of banana
bookmarknauwau
n. a bulrush; a flag
bookmarkneduodo
n. kind of tree
bookmarknegejwaj
nehpan neaig
n. kind of plant, grass, or fern
bookmarknekrei
n. a large bat; the flying fox
bookmarknekro
nepilvan
n. tender shoots
bookmarknerop
n. kind of banana
bookmarknete o un
n. west
bookmarkneyaiñ
nididao
nigie
n. shrub, 1. 5 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3537)
Example: This plant is an aphrodisiac. Eat with coconut meat to make the body strong. Take 1/2 handful of leaves and mix with coconut leaves, use as needed. Mostly men eat this combination. It is best to eat with dry coconut that has no water in it. Eat it any time you wish.
bookmarknigyi neto
n. the chewed fiber of sugarcane
bookmarknijeuc nijeuc
n. kind of plant, grass, or fern
bookmarknijma
n. fallen tree, growing in canopy gap in primary forest. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3465)
Example: When the flowers of this plant are green, it is an indication that the cool season is approaching; when the flowers are brown, the dry season is coming. The wood is used to make rafters for the roof of houses, on which to tie thatch.
bookmarknijman
nofowai
n. river
bookmarknohor
n. kind of taro
bookmarknohosma
nuarin
n. plat (a map, drawn to scale, showing divisions in a piece of land)
bookmarknuei
n. vine, growing in open disturbed area. Flowers white. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3589)
Example: To build a cyclone house, take the vine of this species to tie pieces of the house. To prepare the vine for use as rope, collect many feet of it, put it in a fire, roll it in a figure 8, wait until it softens and then use for tying. This vine is hard and needs to be heated to a high temperature in the fire to make it soft; the person preparing this must use gloves to tie it to the posts and rafters while it is still warm. When it cools, it is very strong. Rope made from this vine will last a long time--perhaps 10-15 years. It can also be used to make a regular house.
bookmarknugep
[nugep] n. Mackinlay’s cuckoo dove
Example: Photo by David Cook Wildlife Photography / Wikimedia Commons, License: CC BY 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons
bookmarknuhujcei
n. vine to 5 m, flower yellow (collection: Michael J. Balick #4937)
Example: In the old days, the hooks of this plant were used as a kind of small fishing hook. Heat the hook over a fire to make it strong, tie a rope to it and use it to catch fish. Take inner bark--1 handful and boil in a full pot of water and wash the body 1x daily to treat scabies. Can work in as soon as 2 days. It cures the sores very fast.
bookmarknumalpau
n. wind-related term; no definition provided
bookmarknup̃ut
pok
adv. seaward
bookmarkrere
adj. leafless; fading
bookmarktarere
adv. near; inshore; near the shore
bookmarkyasua
n. kind of taro
bookmarkyetse
v.n. to go down
bookmark


