dookern
NOONGAR
ENGLISH
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE
Tokenor : Cooked (Nind 1831: 50)
Toknor : Cooked (Cuit) (Dumont D’Urville 1834: 2)
dook-koon : arrange, fire for purpose of burning or cooking (Grey 1839)
Dukun : Arrange The Fire, To (Moore 1842: 121)
Du-kun : cook (Symmons 1842: 9)
Too-koon : to cook, to lay any thing on the fire. (Brady 1845: 40)
ducanan : to stir; rearrange the fire (Salvado 1851: 259)
dookern : To roast (Graham (Curr) 1886: 349)
Daaja dookurn : Cook that meat (Balbuk; Bates XII 2B, 15: 42)
Dookan : Bring, to (Joobaitch (Ngoorweel); Bates XII, 2B, 14: 22)
Doongurn : Make, to (Kajaman; Bates XII, 2B, 11: 28)
Doogurn : Make, to (Monnop, Ballarruk; Bates XII 2B, 24: 22)
doogurn : cook, to (Ngalbaitch; Bates XII 2B, 7a)
Dookurn : Cook that (Ngilgee; Bates XII 2B, 12a: 42)
dookarn : cook (Bussell 1930: 48)
dooken : cook (Tommy Cowan, Tommy Kickett (O’Grady) 1960)
tukuṇinj : beautify, to beautify, to doctor, to work white magic upon a person (Douglas 1968: 83)
dookaniny : carry (Bennell 1978)
tugul : to arrange, put in order, set properly (Von Brandenstein 1988: 105)
dukurn : doctor (Douglas 1991: 19)
djookoorniny : place (to put) (Whitehurst 1992: 44)
dhukarn : to cook, burn (Dench 1994: 190)
Dukun : Cook (Richards 1994: 127)