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to wear or put on commonly | Pawlawt (v) |
politics | Pawlitiks (n) |
the main party, the biggest of the group | Pawlpui (n) |
to embrace, to take hold of, to accept, to obey, to give heed to | Pawm (v) |
to hold or be with till death but refer to tend to someone (parents) till death | Pawm hlum (v) |
to nurse and bring up (a child) | Pawm tlei (v) |
to agree with | Pawmpui (v) |
not thick anymore | Pawn (adj) |
higher in one place than another, swollen, uneven | Pawng (v) |
by force, without paying for (placed before the verb, eg. Pawngsuol = rape, pawng lak = taken by force) | Pawng (adj) |
name of children’s play in the evening wherein they hold each other on the back and play | Pawng aw ziel dum (n) |
to act violently, to be arrogant | Pawngnek (v) |
be sheer force | Pawngpaw (adv) |
the name of a small variety of gourd used as a flask for carrying ‘tibur tui’ | Pawngpawrawl (n) |
rape | Pawngsuol (n) |
that which is in the open, not hidden, or in the interior | Pawnlang (adj) |
diligent, having no hesitation on any job at hand, serious and painstaking in in one’s work | Pâwnthaw (adj) |
having a hole, perforated | Pawp (adj) |
unkempt, rough, muddy | Pawr (adj) |
speak out with a harsh and husked voice | Pawr (adj) |
untidy | Pawrche (adj) |
to pull, to drag | Pawt (v) |
a Meitei originated term for measurement for paddy equivalent to 2 ‘sangphai’ and approximately 40 kilogram | Pawt (n) |
making unnecessary sound | Pawt (v) |
to pull and break (a thread, wire) | Pawt chat (v) |
to pull and stretch (an elastic, a rubber) | Pawt fan (v) |
to carry someone else’ items for money | Pawt phur (v) |
a carrier, a porter, a coolie | Pawt phurmi (n) |
to destroy by pulling (a paper) | Pawt sie (v) |
to tear, to split, to rip up (a cloth, etc) | Pawt thler (v) |
a Hmar Khawbung sub clan | Pazamte (n) |
give | Pe (v) |
to beat about a bush | Pehel (n) |
to throw away, to minus, to subtract | Pei (v) |
ready, to be ready | Pei (adj) |
to have the will, to be willing | Pei (v) |
continuously, right on, one after another | Pei (adv) |
sick, to be sick or unwell | Pei naw (v) |
to throw away, to discard | Peihawn (v) |
to increase or gain (money), to sell at a profit | Peipung (v) |
to give, to offer | Pêk (v) |
doing something on behalf of someone else | Pek (adv) |
to pass on, to hand over | Pek sawng (v) |
to give back, to return | Pekkir (v) |
a separation or divorce by mutual consent between husband and wife (the husband would not re-claim the bride price he had paid nor the wife would demand ‘man thrungpha’ | Peksa chang (n) |
to pass, to pass by, through or out | Pel (v) |
hunting of animal | Pél (v) |
a swallow, a house martin | Peleu (n) |
to slip away, to escape | Pelh (v) |
dislocated | Pelsol (v) |
the name of a fruit bearing plant | Pelte (n) |
to migrate from one place or village to another | Pêm (v) |
a new migrant in a village or locality | Pêmthar (n) |
pen | Pen (n) |
to step, to stride, to pace, a step, a stride, a pace | Pên (v) |
to fillip using the fingers, to strike using only the fingers (in carom games) | Pen (v) |
to turn (to the right or left when walking, etc), (n) a road crossing, a road junction | Pêng (v) |
a branch | Peng (n) |
the place where roads, etc, meet, a branch road, an offshoot | Pengna (n) |
a butterfly, a moth | Pengpelep (n) |
name of bird | Penguin (n) |
pencil | Pensil (n) |
pension | Penson (n) |
Pentecost | Pentikos (n) |
hangover of one’s alcoholic drink of the previous night | Pentrawng (n) |
flat and thin, flat | Pêr (adj) |
to shoot with the pellet bow, to spring up or fly back (as a springy stick, etc) | Per (v) |
a variety of fish | Perbuol (n) |
guitar, a hollow guitar | Perkhuong (n) |
low arches of split bamboo so place as to form a fencing to protect a jhoom from wild pigs, boars, etc | Perngo (n) |
pear fruit, naspati | Perthei (n) |
to reserve by erecting a ‘cross-shaped’ bamboo split (done in jungles by people to signal that they had reserved that spot or portion for their next jhumland) | Perzep (v) |
to graze, to browse, to eat, to dribble | Pet (v) |
kick, to knock against with the lower part of the leg or with foot (eg, football) | Pet (v) |
to take a right or left turn from the main path | Pet (v) |
going astray (especially from good to bad) | Petek (v) |
petrol | Petrol (n) |
to spread (as cloth, etc) | Pha (v) |
to deny | Pha (v) |
object of or for, cause of, meaning of, reason of or for, means of (eg. Mi thu a awi naw leiin a tuor pha an ta kha – he is now suffering as he is not heeding to advise given to him) | Pha (adv) |
to make excuse for (others) | Pha pek (v) |
a weighing machine; a balance | Phahla (n) |
the name of a reed, elephant grass | Phahram (n) |
plain, low-lying, to be or get low | Phai (adj) |
sand | Phaiphin (n) |
the name given to all such musical instruments such as piano, accordion, etc | Phaiphuleng (n) |
the name of a reed which generally grows on bank of rivers, elephant grass | Phairuong (n) |
ringworm | Phaithak (n) |
an ant | Phaivang (n) |
wind, whirlwind | Phaivuo (n) |
a plain, a low lying plain, a valley, a vale, a dale | Phaizawl (n) |
not yet ripe, astringent, rough (in taste) | Phak (adj) |
to reach, to be able to reach or eat, to attain to, to reach as far as, to arrive at, etc | Phâk (v) |
the sparse bamboo plait on which thatches are placed on Hmar traditional roofing | Phakrak (n) |
a variety of wild tree | Phaktel (n) |
to allow, to permit, to grant, to let to be willing to give | Phal (v) |
forbidden, prohibited, unlawful | Phal lo (adj) |
winter, the winter | Phalbi (n) |
permission | Phalna (n) |
enjoy, to take pleasure in | Phàm (v) |
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