Page:A dictionary of the Sunda language of Java.djvu/115

94 Chongklang, to gallop, to trot, run away quickly as animals.

Chongkok, name of a plant, Curculigo latifolia.

Chongkok, some small kinds of tigers or panthers are also called Chongkok. (The machan chongkok is not larger than a wild cat.)

Chongkok, is also the name of a tree, otherwise called Hamběrĕuta.

Chong'o, the extremity of a branch; the branches or the small upper end of a tree or of a bambu, in contradistinction to the lower and thick end which is called Puhu.

Chonto, a muster, a sample, a pattern, a model.

Cho-o, to have in keeping, to give food and wages to servants or labourers. To keep and feed animals for use. To keep as a garden, or more properly the plants therein. To look after and keep in order. Kěbo kudu di cho-o, Buffaloes must be taken care of. Kěbon di cho-o deui, the garden is again kept in order.

Chop, the idiomatic expression of a thorn, needle or anything sharp running into any part of the body. Aduh chop loba chuchuk, mercy on us how the thorns prick.

Choplok, fallen out, displaced, separated from its usual position.

Chopong, having a hole through, open, gaping, not shut.

Chopot, fallen out, displaced; of the same meaning as Choplok but not quite so strong.

Choréham, the jaws, the chaps; the after teeth, the molars otherwise also called Charéham.

Chorét, to make a mark or streak; a mark made by way of a tally to daub in streaks.

Chorogol, a large tree; a variety of wild Rambutan or Tundem which later word see.

Chorok, to stick in or between, as a carrying stick into anything that has to be carried on the shoulders. Pachorok, taken by mistake, confounded.

Chorong, to pass through a funnel.

Chorongan, a funnel.

Chos, the idiomatic expression of shoving in, or inserting one thing within another. Chos di adukĕn, and he shoved them into one another.

Chowak, an opening cut in a forest orjungle, as where a road might pass through; a gap.

Chowéné, a young marriageable woman; a maidenhead. Yowwana, C. 578, youth, manhood; an assemblage of young women. The Sunda word looks like a corruption of this expression made feminine.

Chu, Chinese, ardent spirits, arrack.

Chua, not pleasing, not convinced, of no avail, disappointed.

Chuan, D'ont, be sure not to; also frequently used as Pachuan which see. Chuan aya nu nyokot, be sure that no body takes any.

Chubit, to pinch, to nip.

Chubluk, a pit fall; a hole dug in the earth and lightly covered over with branches &c. into which any wild animal will fall if he steps upon it, especially Rhinoceroses.