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a secret exit, a subsidiary exit | Hlet (n) |
put around the neck | Hli (v) |
to hide from sight, to screen, to overshadow, to obscure, hidden from sight, etc | Hlie (v) |
no added virtue, strength or power | Hliek (adv) |
to overshadow, obscure, to hide | Hliekhu (v) |
protection | Hliekhuna (n) |
to wound, wounded | Hliem (v) |
to be wounded with blood flowing or bones broken, a fresh wound | Hliem (n) |
wound, injury | Hliemna (n) |
to shade, to give shade | Hliep (v) |
to lick (as flames do a pot) | Hlieu (v) |
a shadow, a shade | Hlim (n) |
newly, freshly, just now, fresh, new | Hlim (adv) |
to turn up or lift up (as a coat sleeve, cloth, or any covering) | Hlîm (v) |
happy, joyful, to be happy | Hlim (adj) |
freshly, recently, very fresh, very recent | Hlim hlol (adv) |
cheerful, joyful, happy | Hlim thei (adj) |
looking glass, mirror | Hlimen (n) |
fun spree, amusement | Hlimhlop (n) |
to look happy | Hlimhmel put (n) |
directly, immediately upon | Hlimin (adv) |
happiness, merriment, joy | Hlimna (n) |
those who took Christian revival to the extreme and go astray or move out from the normal church doctrine and establish their own and almost similar with ‘cult’; ‘high revivalist’ is another term use to refer to this group of people | Hlimsang (n) |
happily, joyfully, cheerfully | Hlimtakin (adv) |
shadow | Hlimthla (n) |
pleasing, joyful | Hlimum (adj) |
the noose or knot of traps that uses rope or thread | Hlimval (n) |
a thorn, a prickle | Hling (n) |
to noose, to lasso, to tie a rope round the leg or the neck of an animal to lead it | Hling (v) |
tweezer (for extracting thorns) | Hlingchaiche (n) |
name of thorny plant commonly used as fencing | Hlingdai (n) |
a species of mimosa, the bark of which is used for poisoning fish | Hlingkhang (n) |
crown of thorns | Hlinglukhum (n) |
the soap-nut tree (the fruit is used for washing and as a preventative against leech bites) | Hlingsie (n) |
a variety of shrub or grass | Hlingtheithur (n) |
a variety of thorny plant | Hlingthing (n) |
a variety of edible plant | Hlingthufîr (n) |
a variety of wild tree | Hlingtlum (n) |
to divide or separate one kind from another | Hlip (v) |
to take off (as a coat), to remove (as a cloth) | Hlîp (v) |
exclusively (of a particular item) | Hlîr hlak (adv) |
a drug, a medicine, a weed or a wild plant growing where it is not wanted and in competition with cultivated plants | Hlo (n) |
the name of a plant the shoots of which incline towards the sun, sunflower | Hlo ni en (n) |
name of a flowery weed | Hlo rimsie (n) |
to weed, to clear weeds of jhum, paddy field or garden | Hlo thlo (v) |
loaded (as a gun) | Hlo thun (v) |
grass, short weeds | Hlobet (n) |
weed, grass leaf | Hlohna (n) |
just | Hlol (adv) |
not at all, not in the slightest | Hlol nawh (adv) |
in numbers, also has the idea of many, or in bundle | Hlom (adj) |
the touch me not plant | Hlonuor (n) |
to weep or cry or groan or tremble or pant with | Hlop hlop (adv) |
valuable, to be valuable, precious | Hlu (adj) |
to take in | Hlu (v) |
a young woman entering a man’s house to be his wife; to forcefully enter into someone’s placed uninvited | Hlu khum (v) |
to lay siege and drove out the inhabitants | Hlu suok (v) |
to presume upon or take unreasonable advantage of the forbearance or good nature of another; to be spoilt (as a child) | Hluhlâng (v) |
old, not new, to be old | Hlui (adj) |
to offer, being offered (food, etc) | Hlui (v) |
to put aside (as of no further use or to do another time or for someone else to do; disuse, discard | Hluihlam (v) |
to enter a house or land with the intention of killing, assaulting, or quarrelling with its inmates | Hlukhum (v) |
taking in, absorbing it | Hlulut (v) |
to roll | Hlum (v) |
affix signifying 'dead' (vuokhlum=beaten to dead; kaphlum=shot dead; hmethlum=to switch off) | Hlum (adv) |
of rounded shape (like ball) | Hlûm (adj) |
a variety of wild arum plant | Hlumpiel (n) |
a variety of moth insect | Hlumpuol (n) |
of permanent and regular one | Hlun (adj) |
to occupy, to take possession of, to enter into possession of | Hluo (v) |
to supersede, to take the place of | Hluolan (v) |
that something occurs more regular than normal time | Hluor (v) |
value, worth | Hlutna (n) |
to recognise, to pleasure in | Hlutsak (adj) |
in the front, before | Hma (n) |
early soon, in front, before, prior to, ahead of | Hma (adv) |
just in front of, before the face | Hma bulah (adv) |
until, till | Hma chu (conj) |
in front, before, prior to | Hma in (adv) |
until and unless, till | Hma naw chu (adv) |
in front of, before, ahead | Hmaah (adv) |
to have work on hand (to do or go), to have awaiting one in the future (to do or go) | Hmabak (v) |
a tough prospect or future | Hmabak inko (v) |
the face | Hmai (n) |
to respect someone (presence) | Hmai inza (v) |
washing the face | Hmai phi (v) |
to have a good face | Hmaifai (v) |
to wish to gain favour | Hmaifai tum (v) |
that which is used for one’s advantage | Hmaifaina (n) |
to overlook, to miss out, to left out | Hmaih (v) |
overlooked, missed, omitted | Hmaih (adj) |
to be in a sorry situation, to do something wrong and be exposed | Hmaimawk (v) |
name of a variety of wild tree (the leaf of which is used to wrap fermented soyabeans) | Hmaiphi (n) |
a swim with the face under water | Hmaiphum tui inhlieu (n) |
to meet someone when they are angry or in bad mood | Hmaisa tawng (v) |
face to face | Hmaisan (adj) |
to the face, face to face | Hmaisanah (adv) |
brazen-faced, to be brazen-faced, to put a bold face upon anything | Hmaithinghawng (n) |
a face mask, a covered face | Hmaituom (n) |
a fan | Hmaizap (n) |
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