Old Sumrë P

147


 * pa ("assertive person")
 * paalggal ("penguin")
 * paalggen ("to sink")
 * paalggi ("fish hook")
 * paalggta ("sinking, falling from grace or glory")
 * paalggvar ("ocean floor, depths of the sea")
 * paalggyr ("spirit of someone who died at sea")
 * paawi ("pattern, streak, flair, fashion")
 * paldu ("hare")
 * palduci ("hare-kind, the hare species")
 * panar ("beautiful")
 * panarareas ("to sing")
 * panararė ("song")
 * panararna ("singer")
 * panararotru ("art of singing")
 * panararotruna ("master singer")
 * panarlum ("beauty")
 * Panarlumvar ("the third innermost world in Skawetchimism")
 * panartšo ("to become beautiful")
 * panbsuen ("to expire, to go sour")
 * panen ("to be happy, to rejoice")
 * panik ("satisfied, fertile, rich")
 * panlom ("joy, pleasure, happiness")
 * panlomtweko ("tattoo made for aesthetic purposes")
 * panlonsėpa ("marigold flower")
 * pant ("ink")
 * pántanc ("drop of ink, dot, point of a tattoo needle, diacritic")
 * panten ("to descend from someone, to be a descendant of")
 * pantisten ("to give birth")
 * paren ("to sit")
 * paterdwu ("second")
 * pavda ("asleep")
 * pawa ("delicious, tasty")
 * pӑk ("across, breadth")
 * pӑka ("arse, ass")
 * pӑki ("log or beam that can be used to cross a river")
 * pӑktwo ("to cross, to reach")
 * pӑktwovar ("passageway used by some spirits to enter the physical world")
 * pӑkuutre ("to fart")
 * pӑonsilen ("to hand over")
 * pӑt ("skull")
 * pegӑn ("the past")
 * pegӑnutre ("to learn from past experiences")
 * pehpe ("inland")
 * peht ("twig, offshoot, sleeve, foreskin, clitoral hood")
 * pelten ("to move unsteadily, to move erratically, to stray, to wonder, to surge, to burst banks")
 * pepal ("nose")
 * pepen ("to smell")
 * pepta ("maternal clan")
 * peptañe ("woman belonging to a pepta, female relative on the maternal side")
 * peptañür ("man belonging to a pepta, male relative on the maternal side")
 * per ("three")
 * perhten ("to harry, to molest, to irritate, to plague, to devastate")
 * perren ("to duck, to cower")
 * pėja ("easy")
 * pėjanis ("ease")
 * pėjanisdwir ("talent, innate ability, sense of satisfying ease")
 * pėjen ("to cause")
 * pėjürot ("moon")
 * pėjürotarӑontas ("Lunar eclipse")
 * pėjürotga ("month")
 * pėjürotvar ("nighttime")
 * pėjürotvarna ("revealing")
 * pėjyl ("hero")
 * pėjylci ("heroism")
 * pėjyldwo ("heroism, bravery")
 * Pėjylvar ("Innermost world in Skawechimism")
 * pĕdar ("yarn")
 * pĕĕrtren ("to stitch, to sow")
 * phaiba (“otter den”)
 * phaigsen (“to betray”)
 * phiumgh (“after”)
 * phiuthen (“to show off, to flaunt, to brag”)
 * phot (“tamarack tree”)
 * phüthwu ("small enclosed upland valley, dent, crease, fold, wrinkle, slit, overlap, seam, groove, notch")
 * phüthwusȯn ("bent over, hunched")
 * píccjo ("brave")
 * pič ("hoe, digging tool")
 * pihr ("non-linear movement without clear direction")
 * piimga ("egg")
 * piimgaha ("Goddess of intuition")
 * piimgahajus ("someone who has not performed the kopolk ritual")
 * pim ("orca")
 * pimu ("fluffy")
 * pimülu ("soft fluffy hair")
 * pimülunc ("lock of soft fluffy hair")
 * piñen ("to want to be happy")
 * pistiusen ("to save")
 * pistüüll ("abundance, multitude")
 * pistüülldru ("depletion, abuse of a resource")
 * pistüülli ("mountain hare")
 * pitaren ("to babble")
 * pitarsen ("to frequently babble")
 * píttwen ("to mash, to squash, to crush, to stomp, to grind, to pulp, to chew")
 * plétta ("branch, limb, tributary")
 * plikifa ("duel where the first one to draw blood ones")
 * počtü ("praire dog")
 * podlen ("to waft")
 * podwoden ("to yank, to pull, to tug")
 * pȯgi ("ivory")
 * pranpė ("giant")
 * prentim ("vulgar, disgusting")
 * pron ("crisp")
 * pronbo ("boring person")
 * proncuo ("crisp crumb")
 * prondӑn ("weak looking person, skinny person")
 * prondre ("lucky person")
 * prondriisten ("to crush, to crumble")
 * prondru ("crumbling")
 * prone ("greatest crisp, the name of the most sacred crisp recipe")
 * pronga ("bag of crisps")
 * pronha ("pork rind")
 * pronim ("large variety of crisp")
 * pronka ("affectionate term for a child")
 * pronkwu ("something that seemed good but turned out to be disappointing")
 * pronlyrna ("someone who loves crisps")
 * pronlyrnamu ("fussy eater")
 * pronolk ("holy crisp")
 * pronoswu ("addiction to crisps")
 * pronotru ("art of crisp making")
 * pronpė ("glutton")
 * pronsu ("crispy, brittle")
 * pronsutem ("solid, sturdy")
 * pronsutšo ("to become crispy")
 * prontwo ("to make crisps")
 * pronutre ("to snack")
 * pronvar ("happiness")
 * pŕtne ("hedgehog")
 * psaigh (“nearly, almost, just about, roughly”)
 * psainci ("a Vaipni associated with the rowan tree")
 * psait (“rowan tree“)
 * puaalten ("to nestle in, to get cozy, to huddle for warmth")
 * puarĕ ("vague, broad")
 * pučtü ("armadillo")
 * puh ("dew, dampness")
 * púhanc ("dew drop")
 * puínnu ("tundra")
 * pukȯte ("scraping, shaving")
 * pühdyn ("to roast")
 * pülgu ("flu, cold")
 * pülgudre ("sick person")
 * pülgudru ("recovery from the flu")
 * pülguga ("outbreak, plague")
 * püñ ("hysterical, inconsolable, frantic, distraught")
 * püülther ("wart, boil")
 * püültherdru ("ranunculus acris, upright meadow crowfoot")
 * pwélla ("sympathy")
 * pwolv ("heel")
 * pylen ("to hew, to hack, to cleave")
 * pyyciñ ("sanctuary, sacred place, oasis, soulmate")