An example search has returned 100 entries
-ki
affix in this direction; here; this
bookmarkahtaredei
v.n. go though, as the land
bookmarkared numta
v. to plant taro
bookmarketti
v. to split leaves
bookmarkimraig
n. tomorrow
bookmarkinhosamu
n. kind of sugarcane
bookmarkinlepei u inpoded
inmapoded
n. kind of breadfruit
bookmarkinpa u natmas
n. tree. Growing near village. (collection: Ashley A McGuigan #13)
Example: 1. To cure toothache when pregnant - Take the inner bark from Intejed and boil it in a pot of seawater (about 1 liter) along with 2 leaves from each of inpoutnatmas, narayag, nahayag, and nelmaha. Boil until juice is visibly leaving the plants. Put this water into your mouth and hold it there for 2-3 minutes. Do this this with one cup in the morning, 1 cup in the afternoon, and 1 cup in the evening. 2. This plant is special and people grew it – use it after burial of a chief – wash hands with these leaves and water to cleanse the people who buried the chief. 3. Name means belongs to the spirit
bookmarkintisian
n. a flower
bookmarkitac acen
adj. afar
bookmarkkaru uwaruwa
n. wind-related term; no definition provided
bookmarkkiliek nahpu
n. kind of taro
bookmarklelohos
n. a garden of bananas
bookmarkmaprum
muri muri
naceijo
n. half tide when rising
bookmarknadiat
n. day
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."
bookmarknaha
n. lily. Cultivated grows in village. (collection: Ashley A McGuigan #3)
Example: 1. To cure the sea snake (nispev) curse that causes missed periods. First the husband must combine 4 young leaves of incispev and 4 young leaves of nafanu and mash and squeeze the juice into a small bamboo (1-1.5 inch diameter) The nafanu is important because it is a plant that connects to the sea. Use wildcane leaves cover the bamboo closed. Go to the sick person and unwrap the snake from her. Start from the top and let the woman drink a small part of the potion then wash her with the mixture, making sure to wash head, elbows, knees, feet, and belly. Then take a leaf of naha and break it over the woman’s belly button to break the snake off. Smash the bamboo vessel to pieces. Leave the woman there until the wash dries on her. This takes one whole day and the ceremony in the evening so she can sleep and she must not eat. This ritual is performed by men. 2. Wrap leaf around fish to cook it on fire, tie with pandanus or any bush, vine. Also used to bake Cyrtosperma merkusii in same way as AAM 1 because it has thick watery leaves. 3. For a person who has been burned by the fire, cut the leaf and drip the sap on the burn to cool it – stops burning feeling. 4. If your joints – elbow, wrist, knee, ankle – feel so cold that they are painful, then heat the leaf on both sides and lay it on painful area. It will take the cold and pain away.
bookmarknahleuco yag
n. kind of taro
bookmarknahoijcei
n. the name of a species of creeper
bookmarknalauba
[nalauba] n. Emerald Dove
Example: Photo by Dr. Raju Kasambe/Wikimedia Commons, License: CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons
bookmarknalgaj
n. small treelet, 1 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3682)
Example: Can be used to stop pain from toothache. Break of the top growth of a branch and remove all leaves. Chew on the green stem at the site where there is a toothache. Keep the juice from chewing in your mouth for 2-5 minutes then spit the juice out. Leave the stem fibers in your mouth at the site of pain for about 20 minutes then remove. Then repeat 2 more times. This makes the tooth thinner so it breaks more easily.
bookmarknanedauyan
n. Pacific yellowtail emperor
Example: Photo by Jeffrey T. Williams / Smithsonian Institution, License: CC BY-SA 3.0 via Fishes of Australia
bookmarknapod
n. kind of tree
bookmarknapudve
n. kind of plant, grass, or fern
bookmarknapupwi a darumea
n. kind of sugarcane
bookmarknariko
n. lentils
bookmarknasahas
n. a small water-plant
bookmarknatoga ahrei
n. wind-related term; no definition provided
bookmarknausakrai
n. thorn
bookmarknauun
n. a stem
bookmarknauwatamu
n. kind of sugarcane
bookmarknauwau
n. a bulrush; a flag
bookmarkneaig aged
n. a spotted coconut
bookmarkneaig auyag
n. kind of palm
bookmarkneducai inhujid
n. kind of tree
bookmarknelcau udeuc
n. kind of taro
bookmarknepjen epjen
nerero
n. calabash
bookmarknethokin
n. a poisonous plant used to stupefy fish; also "netokin"
bookmarkneuled
n. kind of sugarcane
bookmarknidi cai
n. frankincense
bookmarkniditau
nijmanyahao
n. Yellow-Edged Moray
Example: Photo by Bernard Dupont, License: CC BY-SA 3.0 via Fishes of Australia
bookmarknipʧinite
nispev
n sea snake
bookmarknitai auanipin upene
n. frankincense
bookmarknitatel (a nelco)
nokoro vai cai oho
n. orchard
bookmarknomrop̃om̃
nononhat
n. Blue-lined large-eye bream
Example: Photo by Jean-Lou Justine / Wikimedia Commons, License: CC BY-SA 3.0 via Fishes of Australia
bookmarknugnas iran
n. a bunch of taro
bookmarknumujced
n. terrestrial fern, 0. 4 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3577)
Example: Join two of the inrolled fronds together at the part where the frond is opening (the tip that is curled) such that the leaves are held together by their unfolding growing tips. Place this along the path that is frequented by a wild pig (they travel along paths) and when the pig passes these two leaves, and is chased by a hunter’s dogs, these leaves in this formation are said to sap some of the pig’s energy and thus allow the dogs to catch up with it. This was explained to Tony by another person who mentioned it as a sort of magical power possessed by this type of fern.
bookmarkpahai
adj. inland
bookmarkpuke
adv. seaward
bookmarkucsiligei
v.a. to pare off rind
bookmarkugnyiv
adj. rich; good, as applied to fruits
bookmarkupreupre
n. tough; a kind of coral
bookmarkäminäkäi
n. Marattia smithii
Example: Frond: bathe in infusion, neurodermatitis and infantile eczema
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