Page 120 of 169, showing 20 records out of 3,373 total
- ushtóⁿga (n.)
- Any soft part.
- ushúde (v.s.)
- Smoky, smoke-filled.
- Foggy, turbid, stirred up, as a stream.
- útha (v.)
- To tell them about (animate objects)
- uthá (v.)
- To tell anything.
- To tell anything about another.
- uthá'ethe (n.)
- Pity, mercy.
- uthá'u'úde (v.a.)
- To gnaw several holes in a solid.
- To speak a foreign language.
- uthá'ude (v.a.)
- To gnaw a hole in a flat solid object.
- uthádathoⁿ (v.)
- To get used to eating any kind of food.
- To make one's voice re-echo often.
- Uthádawoⁿ (prop.noun)
- Northeast fork of the Elkhorn River, flowing through Knox and Pierce counties, Nebraska.
- utháde (n.)
- A kind or sort of thing; a kind of word, etc.
- uthade thiⁿge (v.phrase)
- To have no excuse; to have no reason for a proposed or finished action.
- uthádoⁿ (v.)
- To fasten with the mouth, as with a cork held between the teeth.
- utháe (v.)
- To scatter with the mouth, as a cow may do with a pile of hay.
- uthágude (v.)
- To make an inside point or corner by biting; to gnaw at an inside corner.
- utháha (v.s.)
- To be connected or attached to, as a lariat around a horse's neck, a saddle on a horse, a key in a lock.
- utháhahá (v.)
- To adhere to each one; to stick to each one.
- utháhe (n.)
- Mouthpiece of a pipe; small end of the pipe stem, which is put into the mouth.
- úthahíde (n.)
- Ridicule, fun, jesting.
- utháqthaqthá (v.a.)
- To loosen with the teeth.
- utháqthuqa (v.)
- To bite a deep hole into an object.