[Tel. plu. of vadu. he.] pron. They, vandru. It is also thus used, as equivalent to people folk. navaru my people. mivaru your people. i yurivaru the people of this village. nenu cucinavaru the people whom I saw. Added to some nouns it has an honorific sense, as devaravaru, doravaru your honor. Infl. vari their. varu v. n. To flow down, or drain off, as water from boiled rice, vadiyu, ganjimodalainadikaru. To be lessened or diminished, udugu. v. a. To pare or cut thin, as the ends of a palm leaf. tataku oracivvu.varukonu varu-konu. v. a. To take up by the handful. Metaphorically, to get, gain, possess oneself of. pidikilladiga ettukonu, pondu; cendu. nannu mosamu cesi vademi varukonnadu has he gained any thing by cheating me? varucu or varcu varutsu. (causal of varu) v. a. To touch water with the lips and cast it away. acamincu. To cause to flow,varajeyu. ganjivarcu to pour off the water from boiled rice by inclining the vessel, varu nattuceyu. To expect, pratiksincu, uddesincu. sandhyavarcu to offer up prayers: (because while uttering the prayer called santhya they let water run through their hungers.) “hemakumbha jalamulanogivarci jalakambudirci.” DRU. 774. “sandhyavarcuvela.” G. vi. 17.varupu or varpu varupu. n. The act of straining water or letting it flow, acamanamu. Water poured off from boiling rice, ganji.