Laman:Malay-English vocabulary.djvu/32

Laman ini telah dibaca pruf
16
MALAY-ENGLISH VOCABULARY.

bin'tang, star; also a decoration.

bin'tang ber-a'sap, comet.
bin'targ ber-e'kor, comet.
bin'targ ber-i'dar, planet.
bin'tang p-tang' or bin'tang ba'rat, Venus as an an evening star.
bin'targ ti'mor or bin'targ ba'bi, Venus as a morning star.

bin-ta'ngor, the name of a tree; see bntangor.

bin'ti (Ar.), daughter of.

bio (B.) (Chin.), temple.

bi-o'la (Port.), violin.

bi'ras, brother-in-law or sister-in-law.

bi-ri-bi'ri (Hind.), sheep. Cf. domba and kambing.

bi'ru, blue.

ha'ru biru, confusion, disorder.

bi'sa, poison; poisonous, painful.

bi'sa (Jav.), able, capable, can.

bi'sek, ber-bi'sek, to whisper.

bi'sing, chattering, or any unpleasant noise of that kind.

Bis'nu (Sk.), the Hindu god Vishnu.

bi'su, dumb. Cf. klu.

bi'sul, a boil, abcess. Cf. jrawat and barah.

b-kal', supplies for a journey, especially food, provisions.

b-kas', mark or impression left by any body or action; vessel in which anything is contained.

b-kas' ka'ki, footprint.
b-kas' ta'ngan, handwriting, signature.
b-kas' tu'boh, that which has touched the body, clothes presented as a token of affection.

b-ku', congealed, coagulated, frozen.

a'yer b-ku', ice. Cf. ayer batu.

b-la’ (Ar.), affliction, calamity, misfortune; also ba-la’.

b-la', mm-b-la', to nurture, support, bring up children. Cf. plihara.

b-la'chan, a composition of dried fish and prawns used to season curries.

b-la'chu, unbleached calico.

b-lah', mm-b-lah', to split, cleave, divide, cut in two lengthwise.

s-b-lah' or sb'lah, one side of that which is divided, hence one side of anything.
sb'lah kanan, the right side.
sb'lah kiri, the left side.
sb'lah ma'ta, one eye.
sb'lah si'ni, this side.
Often = the other side, as: sb'lah gu'nong, the other side of the mountain.
sb'lah m-nyb'lah or k-du'a b-lah', both sides.
sb'lah-kan, to lay aside, separate.

b-la'jar, to learn; see ajar.

b-la'ka, altogether, entirely, quite.

b-la'kang, the back, the posterior; behind, hereafter, afterwards.

b-la'ka-ngi and b-la'kang-kan, to turn one's back on.

b-la'lai, the trunk of an elephant, the proboscis of insects.

b-la'lang, grasshoppers, locusts and crickets.

B-lan'da, Dutch; a corruption of Hollander; also wolanda.