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spirit

Language: 
Biyal Biyal
Australian: 
Mawn
English JS Main: 
spirit
English: 
They call a spirit, Mawn: they often scruple to approach a corpse, saying that the mawn will seize them, and that it fastens upon them in the night when asleep.
Category: 
death and superstition
Sub-category: 
superstition
Source: 
Tench
Page: 
280
Line: 
20
Respelt: 
mån
Part of speech: 
noun
Date: 
1793
Meaning Clue: 
‘man’: man = ‘To take’ Dawes [a:37:0.1] [BB]
Source Details: 
Captain Watkin Tench: A Narrative of the expedition to Botany Bay (1789) and A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson 1788-1791 (1793): Republished at Sydney’s First Four Years (1961), Library of Australian History
Comment: 
‘Mawn’ man = ‘They call a spirit, Mawn: they often scruple to approach a corpse, saying that the mawn will seize them, and that it fastens upon them in the night when asleep.’: Tench [280:20] [BB]

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Contact Jeremy Steele

W: aboriginallanguages.com

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