Meaning:creel, bamboo wicker fishpot for trapping and carrying fish (Eastern Nep. maulā ), cylindrical in shape and with an involuted cone-shaped mouth at one end which permits the fish to swim into the creel when submersed but makes it unlikely that they will swim out again
Meaning:a see-saw shaped rice thrasher consisting of a long wooden lever pivoting on a short horizontal axle protruding from a wooden post or pylon above a stone floor. A mound-shaped stone is affixed to the underside of the lever at one end, and the lever is depressed by foot at the opposite end and released so as to lift the pounding stone and allow it to come down repeatedly on to the paddy placed in a depression in the stone floor
Nepali: ḍhikī.
Derivation:[< pɨnnɨ vt-2b 'pound']
Comments:The pɨnkɨk, like the dzagúyɨk (q.v.), are believed by the Dumi to have originally been inventions of the ancient cannibalistic Rākṣas
Entry:pɨnnɨ
Grammar:vt-2b pɨnd/pɨn-pɨnts/pɨs
Meaning:pound (e.g. sura 'paddy'), esp. with a pɨnkɨk, tholɨ, sɨNkhoʔ, sɨpo or samphep and rɨtsɨlu
Meaning:squeeze, wring (patient agreement with the wrung out fluid, e.g. ɨmma 'millet beer' from tsampɨ 'fermented millet' or kaNkɨ 'water' from wet clothes, not with the the object or substance from which it is wrung out)