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from | Inthok (prpn) |
to participate for work, to go out for a particular job | Inthok (v) |
to physically stretch oneself | Inthrai (v) |
to grow, growing | Inthrang (v) |
to separate amicably | Inthratthre (v) |
to separate, to divorce, release of water that has accumulated in large quantity | Inthre (v) |
to stretch oneself physically | Inthrei (v) |
separation, division, divorce | Inthrena (n) |
to frighten, to startle, to make someone scare | Inthri (v) |
to bring down a hen after it hatched along with the chickens | Inthrum (v) |
sit, to sit (on chair, stool, etc) | Inthrung (v) |
deep, to be deep, not shallow | Inthûk (adj) |
to control oneself | Inthunun (v) |
discipline | Inthununna (n) |
to be double, to be twofold, doubled, twofold | Inthuo (v) |
breathe | Inthuok (n) |
to put dress on | Inthuom (v) |
dress, apparel, clothing, garments | Inthuomna (n) |
to hide one's self, to be hidden | Inthup (v) |
to be unanimous or of one mind, to be united | Inthuruol (v) |
unity, oneness | Inthuruolna (n) |
to be taken up with one to the exclusion of others | Inti bik (v) |
to promise | Intiem (v) |
promise one another, to make a contract, to take oath, to make vows, to vow | Intiemkam (v) |
a vow, an oath | Intiemkamna (n) |
a vow | Intiemkamna (v) |
a promise | Intiemna (n) |
general census | Intiempui (n) |
name of a basket | Intieng (n) |
to pile up, to put one on top of another, one on top of another | Intieng (v) |
name of edible wild fruit having juicy flower | Intier (n) |
of same size or height | Intiet (adj) |
to be extra cautious, careful, wary, etc | Intîm (adj) |
to arrange food provision | Intintuo (v) |
to make oneself important | Intipoimaw (v) |
to send, to dispatch | Intir (v) |
a poisonous centipede | Intit (n) |
to be proud of oneself | Intithei (v) |
to act or behave proudly | Intivei (v) |
to redeem, to buy back, to atone | Intlan (v) |
atonement, redemption | Intlanna (n) |
to run a race, to race, to compete in a running race | Intlansiek (v) |
to let someone runaway or escape | Intlansiettir (v) |
standing in line, to put in line | Intlar (v) |
having a big difference | Intlau (adj) |
a fool, an imbecile | Intlaw (n) |
to lie with a woman and ruin her spotlessness, to defeat, etc | Intlâwm (v) |
to violently turn the trunk around randomly and restlessly | Intleng (v) |
accumulation of water, liquid, fluid, etc | Intling (n) |
to boil, boiling (water or liquid substance) | Intlok (v) |
to walk together, to be on good terms with one another | Intlon (v) |
to remove the contents of a pot altogether | Intlong (v) |
to be equal | Intluk (adj) |
brought to somebody’s notice | Intlun (v) |
a white ant hill | Intlung (n) |
a Hmar Lungtau sub clan | Intoate (n) |
self sufficient | Intodel (adj) |
the name of a game played with a top, to play at the above game, to collide | Intok (n) |
to slide | Intol (v) |
to crouch, to be crumpled, to be drawn together, to be contracted, to be shrunken | Intom (v) |
to meet one another, to come across one another | Intong (v) |
to be with each other at all time | Intrawiawm (v) |
to dry over the fire | Intrawl (v) |
to share, to use or have in common | Intrawm (v) |
a ritual performed by a traditional pre-Christian priest so as to cleanse the unclean | Intrei (n) |
steep, precipitous | Intrên (adj) |
a situation of excessive heat (fire, sunshine, etc) on the body | Intreng (adj) |
soot formed over Hmar traditional village hearth or fire place | Intring (n) |
to connect, to relate to, to bond with | Intringmit (v) |
a woman in her periods | Intrum lo (n) |
name of a flowering wild tree (if its bloom good, it is believed to be a good year) | Intruo (n) |
a variety of wild tree | Intruo (n) |
to be grey (hair), to have grey hair | Intruok (v) |
matching, corresponding (in pattern or design) | Intu (adj) |
to melt away, to melt | Intui (v) |
a fowl laying an egg | Intui (v) |
a member of a family separating from each another | Intuithlar (v) |
to submit oneself | Intuklut (v) |
to swing, to swing, to sway, to move back and forth; to cling on using the hand | Intûl (v) |
to blame, to put the blame, to accuse | Intum (n) |
to sulk, to show sulky face | Intûm (v) |
the palm tree | Intûm (v) |
a variety of wild strawberry fruit that ripen in end month of ‘thlatun’ or April | Intun (n) |
to make something stand on one end leaning against something, to prop up in a vertical position | Intung (v) |
to make ends meet | Intuo (v) |
to sharpened (knife or iron materials) | Intuoi (v) |
meeting of two individual or other living things | Intuok (v) |
meeting of more than two individual or other living things | Intuokkhawm (v) |
meeting (of many people) | Intuokkhawmna (n) |
a free for all or civil war type mob violence between two parties | Intuolvuok (v) |
to wrap oneself with cloth, etc | Intuom (v) |
gloomy | Intûr (adj) |
to be related to one another as brothers or sisters | Inunau (v) |
brotherhood or sisterhood | Inunauna (n) |
not easily breakable (thread, wire), tough | Inuoi (adj) |
to retch | Inuok (v) |
to put a lid on a pot when boiling on the fire to keep the steam in, humid | Inup (v) |
at loss, to bewildered, to have nowhere to go | Invai (v) |
to crawl, to go, to walk, to wander about | Invâk (v) |
to go into rings or circles | Inval (v) |
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