hugga

Verb

 * 1)  to comfort

Etymology
From, from.

Verb

 * 1) to hew, chop

Etymology
From, from , from , from.

Verb

 * 1) to strike with something sharp (to cut into pieces, sculpt, damage, or for any other purpose); to stab, to cut, to hew, to chop, to fell (trees), to carve (sculpt)
 * 2) to (forcefully) attack with a sharp body part, like teeth or claws, most commonly of biting
 * 3)  to forcefully grab
 * 4)  to (suddenly) hurt
 * 1) to (forcefully) attack with a sharp body part, like teeth or claws, most commonly of biting
 * 2)  to forcefully grab
 * 3)  to (suddenly) hurt
 * 1) to (forcefully) attack with a sharp body part, like teeth or claws, most commonly of biting
 * 2)  to forcefully grab
 * 3)  to (suddenly) hurt
 * 1)  to forcefully grab
 * 2)  to (suddenly) hurt
 * 1)  to (suddenly) hurt
 * 1)  to (suddenly) hurt
 * 1)  to (suddenly) hurt

Usage notes
"Hugga i bitar" = "cut to pieces" and the like makes it sensible to include "cut" as a translation, though the intuition isn't of a glancing strike.