Bray 1934: 160, 161. Regular causative formation from kah-iŋg 'to die' q.v. The old word xall-iŋg is also attested in the meaning 'to kill', but only sporadically; it seems to have been mostly preserved in the meaning 'to hit, strike, fire (a gun), throw (a stone)' [Bray 1934: 179].
Number:44
Word:knee
Brahui:goːɖ-1
Bray 1934: 118. Presumably borrowed from Indo-Aryan (Sindhi goːɖoː, etc.). Another borrowing is zaːn 'knee' [Bray 1934: 310], from Baluchi; it is not clear which word is the more statistically frequent. Secondary synonym: pun [Bray 1934: 244], seemingly only used in idiomatic expressions, e. g. pun-teaːi tuːɬ 'to kneel down'.
Bray 1934: 211. Most likely related to murr 'far' q.v.; -un is a productive adjectival suffix, although the status of the velar component -ɣ- is not quite clear (however, it is also encountered in several other adjectives as well, cf. 'new'). Cf. also the causative verb mur-iːf-iŋg 'to make long, extend, stretch', from the same root.
Number:50
Word:louse
Brahui:boːɖ ~ boːɽ-1
Bray 1934: 76, 77. Meaning glossed as 'louse, vermin'. Of Baluchi origin.
Bray 1934: 54. Plural form: ari-sk. Meaning glossed as 'male individual, person'. Also attested in the variant ari-ɣ (contraction with the productive nominal suffix -aɣ).
Bray 1934: 293. The root tuː is still used freely in the meaning 'month' [ibid.], but the word 'moon' is a compound formation with *beː, possibly the original Dravidian word for 'white' (= Tamil veɭ-, etc.).