An example search has returned 100 entries

ahlaadaig

listenloadingplaying

adj. driven to and fro with the wind

ajujai

listenloadingplaying

v. go up; go east

am̃jeng

listenloadingplaying

v. sleep

araparap

n. sunset

atga nethanethan

v. passed by on the other side

atit

listenloadingplaying

v. tie

atpu

listenloadingplaying

v hide

ehla

adj. unripe; also "ehlai"

ehtele cei nai

n. full moon

et amai kava

listenloadingplaying

[et amai kava] phr. he chews kava

etuko, cai

v. to split wood

igcase

n. a place down, or westward

imjav

adj. soft, over-ripe, as breadfruit.

incacas

Photo by K. David Harrison, April 2016.
listenloadingplaying

n. green peppers

Example: Photo by K. David Harrison, April 2016.

incanaij yohon

n. kind of plant, grass, or fern

incauaij aho

n. kind of tree

inceila

Planchonella
listenloadingplaying

n. tree, 10 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #4033)

inceimu

Used as a leaf compost for planting taro, layered on the bottom of the hole and covering the taro as well.

n. shrub to treelet, 3 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3265)

Example: Used as a leaf compost for planting taro, layered on the bottom of the hole and covering the taro as well.

incilpunehei

Neuburgia corynocarpa
listenloadingplaying

n. scandent shrub, 1 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3277)

incipinti

This plant is gathered for firewood. It is said that the fragrance of the flowers is not nice.
listenloadingplaying

n. shrub, 1. 5-2 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3580)

Example: This plant is gathered for firewood. It is said that the fragrance of the flowers is not nice.

inhaij

n. the candle-nut tree; also "inhaig"

inhujac

listenloadingplaying

n. kind of shellfish

inlah

n. light

inmehei

Photo by K. David Harrison, April 2016.
listenloadingplaying

n. kind of cabbage or leaf

Example: Photo by K. David Harrison, April 2016.

inmehei ipciv

n. kind of banana

inmeripciv

n. kind of breadfruit

inmoijeuv an nofomot

listenloadingplaying

[inmoiʤev anofomat] n. a bright red star in the former constellation Argo Navis, in the direction of where the islands meet on the horizon

inmokomelmat

listenloadingplaying

n. kind of fish

inpci

listenloadingplaying

n. kind of fish

inrowod

listenloadingplaying

n. good luck plant (RPV #14)

inrukdum nohos

n. kind of banana

intekes ~ inrowod

1. The green leaves of this plant are used to cover fish, when cooking them in a fire.
listenloadingplaying

n. treelet, 2 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #4085)

Example: 1. The green leaves of this plant are used to cover fish, when cooking them in a fire.

intel e cha

This is a "message plant." If a person puts the flower behind their ear and then stares  out at you, or tosses the flower to you, then say yes and follow them, for example, to drink kava, or to go swimming. Or a man invites a woman to go somewhere with him. Alternatively, you can leave the flower on a table and this is also a message to go with a person. Leaves also used to wrap foods. Decorate yard around the house.
listenloadingplaying

n. terrestrial orchid, growing in open (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3523)

Example: This is a "message plant." If a person puts the flower behind their ear and then stares out at you, or tosses the flower to you, then say yes and follow them, for example, to drink kava, or to go swimming. Or a man invites a woman to go somewhere with him. Alternatively, you can leave the flower on a table and this is also a message to go with a person. Leaves also used to wrap foods. Decorate yard around the house.

intelecha

listenloadingplaying

n. Spathoglottis petri (RPV #166)

interi amu

n. kind of taro

intesyan numarei

Lethrinus genivittatus http://fishbase.org/summary/Lethrinus-genivittatus.html
listenloadingplaying

n. Longspine emperor

Example: Photo by Museum of New Zealand / Te Papa Tongarewa, License: CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 via Fishes of Australia

intijganeno

name = "stonefish ears" 1. To treat rashes - boil 4 leaves in water ad wait until it cools. Wash in this once a day until rash goes away. 2. Stonefish sting – very painful: 1 handful of leaves with squeezed coconut juice – coconut water – from green coconut. Mix the leaves and water and then make a cut in the wound to enlarge it and pour this juice into the wound. In 5-10 minutes the pain will stop, use 1x, very powerful. 3.If a person such as a mother touches the stonefish while preparing it for food, then does not wash hands, can infect a child – and the child will get sores. Take a small branch and boil it in the water and wash the baby with it to make pain go away. 4. Stonefish is a greatly appreciated food that must be prepared carefully by holding the fish by the mouth and not touching the body. Boil the fish to inactivate the poison and then prepare it as a normal fish for cooking. Poison is found in top spine of fish.
listenloadingplaying

n. shrub. Found in the village Unames. (collection: Ashley A McGuigan #33)

Example: name = "stonefish ears" 1. To treat rashes - boil 4 leaves in water ad wait until it cools. Wash in this once a day until rash goes away. 2. Stonefish sting – very painful: 1 handful of leaves with squeezed coconut juice – coconut water – from green coconut. Mix the leaves and water and then make a cut in the wound to enlarge it and pour this juice into the wound. In 5-10 minutes the pain will stop, use 1x, very powerful. 3.If a person such as a mother touches the stonefish while preparing it for food, then does not wash hands, can infect a child – and the child will get sores. Take a small branch and boil it in the water and wash the baby with it to make pain go away. 4. Stonefish is a greatly appreciated food that must be prepared carefully by holding the fish by the mouth and not touching the body. Boil the fish to inactivate the poison and then prepare it as a normal fish for cooking. Poison is found in top spine of fish.

intijgejei

Acanthurus guttatus http://fishbase.org/summary/Acanthurus-guttatus.html
listenloadingplaying

n. Whitespotted surgeonfish

Example: Photo by Jeffrey T. Williams / Smithsonian Institution, License: CC BY-SA 3.0 via Fishes of Australia

intiʧ nag

listenloadingplaying

[intiʧ ɲaŋ] n. ear

intupohos

listenloadingplaying

n. kind of breadfruit

inwei

listenloadingplaying

[inwei] n. water

inyade

n. kind of banana

inyau

listenloadingplaying

n. whale

isjii

listenloadingplaying

v. to fish (with a net)

iña

listenloadingplaying

n. fishing line

iñcesjinyat

listenloadingplaying

n. sandalwood (RPV #110)

iñytuplec

Wood used for timber.
listenloadingplaying

n. tree to 10 m tall, dbh 50 cm (collection: Michael J. Balick #4908)

Example: Wood used for timber.

jipe

listenloadingplaying

v. distinguish (between two things)

kalilitupou

listenloadingplaying

n. a giant

lelohos

n. a garden of bananas

ma

adj. ripe, as fruit; healed, as a wound; also "mah"

mac

n. cup (mug)

nabudschata

n. Achyranthes aspera L.

Example: juice squeezed from leaves; taken internally against asthma and put into boils

nadi adiat upni

listenloadingplaying

[naθi aθiat upni] phr. Good morning. (greeting in mid-morning, after 10 o’clock)

nahauyau

listenloadingplaying

n. kind of turtle

nahco aco

listenloadingplaying

[naɣo aɣo] n. just after sundown, still light

nahleuco yag

n. kind of taro

naiji elcau

n. kind of sugarcane

nakai

listenloadingplaying

n. kind of banana (short fruits)

naledpen

Tyto alba
listenloadingplaying

[naleθpeɲ] n. Barn Owl

Example: Photo by Matt Knoth, License: CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 via Flickr

nalmuh

listenloadingplaying

n. kind of shellfish

nanad itohou

1. The leaves of this plant are used as a fertilizer when a person plants taro "to help to feed the ground for next year." 2. Sapwood of this tree, and one more [GMP 3591], in old days take from west side and cross mountain to the east, and on red clay mountain, burn it to make spirits to give more sun instead of rain so that gardens will grow well.
listenloadingplaying

n. shrub, 2 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3456)

Example: 1. The leaves of this plant are used as a fertilizer when a person plants taro "to help to feed the ground for next year." 2. Sapwood of this tree, and one more [GMP 3591], in old days take from west side and cross mountain to the east, and on red clay mountain, burn it to make spirits to give more sun instead of rain so that gardens will grow well.

naop yi atmas

n. a small whirlwind

napleañ

The wood is good for making paddles as well as to make canoes.
listenloadingplaying

n. tree to 15 m, dbh 30-45 cm (collection: Michael J. Balick #4938)

Example: The wood is good for making paddles as well as to make canoes.

narevaro

The straight young stems of this plant are used to make bows and arrows. The larger stems are used to make house posts. Excellent for coastal areas as the wood is strong. Firewood.
listenloadingplaying

n. shrub, 1. 5 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3538)

Example: The straight young stems of this plant are used to make bows and arrows. The larger stems are used to make house posts. Excellent for coastal areas as the wood is strong. Firewood.

narutu umlai

n. wind-related term; no definition provided

nauanohatag

listenloadingplaying

n. firmament (astronomical)

nauhoig yi amud

n. break of day

nautahos

A "message plant". In ancient times, this plant was used for communicating. If you go to a person who composes songs and give this to them, they will know to compose a song for you. Name means "flowers on the ground".
listenloadingplaying

n. herb, 1. 5 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3280)

Example: A "message plant". In ancient times, this plant was used for communicating. If you go to a person who composes songs and give this to them, they will know to compose a song for you. Name means "flowers on the ground".

nauwainapit

n. lightning

nawuranig upni

listenloadingplaying

[nawuraniŋ upni] phr. thank you very much

necñopod

Acalypha repanda
listenloadingplaying

n. shrub, 1. 5 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #4145)

neduon yau

n. kind of banana

nedwodou

To bring luck when fishing. Take 4  leaves with stems still on them-- first thing in the morning, when it is cool and quiet and there is not much noise, break the left hand side from two leaves and the right hand side from two leaves (total 4 half leaves) and take those pieces and put in the bag containing your fishing gear. The meaning of the local name is that "these leaves will please the Sea God" who will not understand it if a fisherman does not have leaves with them on their trip.  There are groups of people who are part of the Sea Gods and you must notify these people before you go out to fish. If you have these leaves in your bag,  you are said to get many fish. In the past certain people were responsible for the harvest from the sea; these people used to know this ritual. Not much known at present. Birds eat the fruit of this tree as does the flying fox.
listenloadingplaying

n. tree to 6 m, dbh 10 cm (collection: Michael J. Balick #4865)

Example: To bring luck when fishing. Take 4 leaves with stems still on them-- first thing in the morning, when it is cool and quiet and there is not much noise, break the left hand side from two leaves and the right hand side from two leaves (total 4 half leaves) and take those pieces and put in the bag containing your fishing gear. The meaning of the local name is that "these leaves will please the Sea God" who will not understand it if a fisherman does not have leaves with them on their trip. There are groups of people who are part of the Sea Gods and you must notify these people before you go out to fish. If you have these leaves in your bag, you are said to get many fish. In the past certain people were responsible for the harvest from the sea; these people used to know this ritual. Not much known at present. Birds eat the fruit of this tree as does the flying fox.

neiang

listenloadingplaying

[neijaŋ] n. coconut

nejecjec

The younger,soft leaves are used to wrap local foods, for example bananas. To prepare a type of "local cheese," made from fermented breadfruit and fermented banana, mix a bit of coconut milk and wrap these two fruits in the leaves and cook under ground. Not clear about the way the food is fermented.
listenloadingplaying

n. epiphyte c. 1 m above forest floor, growing in secondary forest above river. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #3650)

Example: The younger,soft leaves are used to wrap local foods, for example bananas. To prepare a type of "local cheese," made from fermented breadfruit and fermented banana, mix a bit of coconut milk and wrap these two fruits in the leaves and cook under ground. Not clear about the way the food is fermented.

nejecjec

Asplenium amboinense
listenloadingplaying

n. epiphyte on prop roots and main tree trunks, growing in dense rainforest. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #4044)

nejecjeñ

Leukosyke australis
listenloadingplaying

n. small tree, 5 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #4059)

nelka

listenloadingplaying

n. netted brake (RPV #232)

nemeg

Choerodon anchorago http://fishbase.org/summary/Choerodon-anchorago.html
listenloadingplaying

n. Anchor tuskfish, Orange-dotted tuskfish

Example: Photo by Mark Rosenstein, iNaturalist: CC BY-A-NC-SA 3.0 via Fishes of Australia

nemelmat

listenloadingplaying

n. kind of bush

nemit

n. kind of tree

nenho

n. the name of a poisonous plant

nepigpig

n. before daylight

nerin cat

n. green pandanus leaf

nerumut

n. a hollow place in taro

nese

A handful of flower buds are collected and put into water with 1-2 pieces of papaya roots. Heat the water and drink it hot for the treatment of hypertension or vein problems, or to promote circulation in overweight people. Do this treatment 1x a month. The white sap is collected and used to soften octopus flesh for eating. Put sap, fruits and chopped leaves in a bowl and add the octopus, allowing it to remain in the bowl for 1 hour--this will soften the flesh of the animal. The sap can be used to wash the skin of tough beef or wild pig--it helps to "burn" off (remove) the skin. When cooking tough meat, take young fruits of this tree and cut them up and put them in the pot with the meat, boil it to soften the meat which can then be cooked.
listenloadingplaying

n. shrub to 2 m, flowers white. forest near house. (collection: Michael J. Balick #4871)

Example: A handful of flower buds are collected and put into water with 1-2 pieces of papaya roots. Heat the water and drink it hot for the treatment of hypertension or vein problems, or to promote circulation in overweight people. Do this treatment 1x a month. The white sap is collected and used to soften octopus flesh for eating. Put sap, fruits and chopped leaves in a bowl and add the octopus, allowing it to remain in the bowl for 1 hour--this will soften the flesh of the animal. The sap can be used to wash the skin of tough beef or wild pig--it helps to "burn" off (remove) the skin. When cooking tough meat, take young fruits of this tree and cut them up and put them in the pot with the meat, boil it to soften the meat which can then be cooked.

nese

n. the takoma or tekma, a tree with white flowers

netopdecraiñ

The name of this plant means "division" -- if someone wants to help to destroy your business or home, they put this plant in front of your business or your home and this will help to scatter out your family from where they are living.
listenloadingplaying

n. herb to 45 cm, seeds brown. Red clay soil (collection: Michael J. Balick #4888)

Example: The name of this plant means "division" -- if someone wants to help to destroy your business or home, they put this plant in front of your business or your home and this will help to scatter out your family from where they are living.

neuled

n. kind of sugarcane

nidwunitei

1. There are kinds of this plant. This is considered the black one. See GMP #4102, Cyathea sp, which is considered the white one.
listenloadingplaying

n. tree fern, 2-3 m tall (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #4100)

Example: 1. There are kinds of this plant. This is considered the black one. See GMP #4102, Cyathea sp, which is considered the white one.

nilec

Epipremnum
listenloadingplaying

n. liana climbing on calophyllum trunk, growing along sandy beach. Leaves variegated. (collection: Gregory M. Plunkett #4144)

nowyeyang

listenloadingplaying

n. shrub to 2 m tall, flowers pink (collection: Michael J. Balick #4955)

Example: The tubers of this variety are sweet, not bitter and are eaten after cooking. The young leaves are eaten after boiling in water until they are soft, either plain or cooked in soup. It is important to only harvest and prepare the young leaves in this way, as the older leaves will not get soft even after cooking. The young leaves are used to cover the top layer of the earth oven, on top of the stones that comprise the upper layer of the earth oven.

noyeiwow

This is a cultivated, edible tuber. If a cyclone comes and blows the vines, the tuber will still be intact. The vines of this type of Dioscorea are very strong. Normal yam vine tears in high winds and the tuber will not grow for food but will die; this one will not. It is very good for places with strong winds and storms.
listenloadingplaying

n. vine to 4 m, cultivated (collection: Michael J. Balick #5013)

Example: This is a cultivated, edible tuber. If a cyclone comes and blows the vines, the tuber will still be intact. The vines of this type of Dioscorea are very strong. Normal yam vine tears in high winds and the tuber will not grow for food but will die; this one will not. It is very good for places with strong winds and storms.

nugnyiobod

n. kind of plant, grass, or fern

numutan

listenloadingplaying

n. kind of fish (folk name)

pejadi

v.n. get off the reef

semo semo

listenloadingplaying

n. a giant

tar ~ [introduced tamprem]

Peel the shell of the fruit and eat the inner part, or make jam from this part. Spit out the seeds. The branches of this tree are used for firewood.
listenloadingplaying

n. tree to 8 m, dbh 60 cm (collection: Michael J. Balick #4984)

Example: Peel the shell of the fruit and eat the inner part, or make jam from this part. Spit out the seeds. The branches of this tree are used for firewood.

tatau

Sphyraena putnamae http://fishbase.org/summary/Sphyraena-putnamae.html
listenloadingplaying

n. Sawtooth barracuda

Example: Photo by Stephanie W. Batzer, License: CC BY-SA 3.0 via Fishes of Australia