Sitting crosslegged, supported by a turban or chadar tied round knees and back.
A title by which women address a son,brother, brother’s son.
A courtyard in front of a, house. 2. An enclosure containing many houses. 3. Octopus, said to be found in the Indus. 4. Turn, twist.
To bind, bandage, fold. 2. To wind, reel. 3. To beset, surround, besiege, encompass, hem in, inclose, invest, blockade, go round.
A camel at commencement of 8th year. 2. Periodical distribution of land varying from 1 to 24 years.
A sugarcane press. 2. A cotton cleaning apparatus. 8. A rolling pin. 4. Moveable outer pegs of yoke.
The two outer removeable pins of a bullock yoke. To roll, pass between rollers, hence to press (sugarcane), to clean cotton.
Heifer. 2. Enclosed block of land esp. grass preserve in the Bar.
Oh! Spoken by woman in addressing children. used by women to men.
Large, great, long, main, elder, ample, major, mighty. Ancestor, progenitor.
Ancestor, progenitor, patriarch, chief, elder ; given by Bamford as an affectionate diminutive.
The 314th letter of the W. P. Alphabet. In Roman character it is variously written as y. i. e. ai.
The eleventh night of lunar month kept in. memory of Pir Muh-ud-din Abd-ul- Qadir Gylani
is given by Bomford as a termination, signifying comparison in Shahpur and ” somewhat ” in S. Punjab
Is the fifteenth letter of the W. P. alphabet. In Roman character d or D.
Way, mariner, mode. 2. Desert, an merit, fitness. 3. A post position signifying size. adj. Proper, fit, worthy, able, qualified.
The fine dust on land produced by saline efflorescence or much traffic.
A female camel. Camels have separate names for every stage of life up to one year.
Strong, powerful great, deep hard, heavy per vent, oppressive.
Tusk of an animal, root of tooth. 2. Bite or snap of an animal.