Page:An Australian language as spoken by the Awabakal.djvu/398

 AX AUSTRALIAN LANGUAGE.

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��Dabal — a bone.

Dabl)armallau2; — mob of natives D;ibbu!:jari'a — to bury ; to plant. Dal)bungun2^ — a father. Dabburanpf — pipe-clay. Dabbuyarra muron — to give or

bestow life. Dabuan — a small kind of leecbes. Daddirra — ^to be filled, to bave

enough, to be satisfied. Daddur — curdled, as milk. Dagagualbirang — belonging to

another place ; a stranger. Daggal — the cheeks. Daggalbuddi — bushy whiskers. Daggan — sticking fast, like bark

when not splitting well. Dagixarang — a wood-worm. Dagu — dung, dirt. Dagui — a shadow. Dagun — ground, soil. Dagun — when ? Dagunbil — a dirty fellow. Dagunbilmarra — to make dirty. Dagundu — where to ? Daguumar — a grave. Daiangun — forward. Daiba — voluptuous. Daimarra — to dispute. Daimiangarra — to dash in, as

rain driven by wind. Dainbunninga — to come back

after being driven off. Daiudu — here ! Daingamallauna — to outdo, to

excel. [ii^g-

Daingamarra — to vie in throw- Dalaimbang — sharp, as a toma- hawk. Dalaiu — the tongue. X)alaingaldain — one that doubts;

an unbeliever. Dalaingarra — to misbelieve, to

d(mbt. Dalalinga — to eat again. Daltira — snow.

��Dalbadambirra — to crush to

atoms, to grind. Dalbagarra — to tear asunder, to

put apart, to open. Dalban-dalbanuirra — to bruise,

to pound. Dalbanna — -to be bruised. Dalbar — the shoulder bone. Dalbarra — to be wet. Dalbiuga — to turn upside down. Dalbirrn — to strike the time with

the ' bargan,' as the native

men do in singing. Dalga — gum in the eye. Dalgang — very crooked; subst.,

a bent bough. Dalia — a species of iguana. Dallabadarra — to split. Dallabadirra — to split with an

instrument. Dallabalga — 'schambedeckung.' Dallabalganna — to part; as the

parting of the hair. Dallabanna— to go to ruin ; to

destroy. Dallabumarra — to destroy, to

break in pieces. Dalladallabunna — to split. Dallagarra — to avoid; to try to

escape. Dallai — angry.

Dallaimarra — to be angry with. Dallciin — root of the ' pear-tree.' Dallamarra — to break, break in

pieces ; to destroy. Dallambul — very soon. Dalian — soon. Dallangir — fresh, new. Dallawang — an ' apple-tree.' Dallunarong — a young man still

growing. Dallungal — a fine fellow. Dalmambirra— to feed (a baby). Dalman — a place of plenty. Dalgi — transgression. [loiig- Dalgarrimanna — to eat all day. Dalnumminga — to eat before. Damalicu — sweet, pleasant.

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