Search results for "sapatus"
su-ut 1v To pull something on over something else. Igsu-ut ku ka kinabò. I pull the blouse on over my head. Igsu-ut ka sapatus nu. Wear your shoes. see: sa-ub. 2v To sew up the seam of a sarong so that it’s circular. 3to resemble or take after someone. Nigsu-ut to inoy; malaab so bakò It resembles it’s mother; it has a red jaw.
ulì phr.: ogpo-ul-uli-oy to goinawa. 1v To return to a starting point; to go home. 2To return something. Nig-angayan din on ka gabas no in-ulì din on kanak. He fetched the saw and returned it to me. Ka sika gabas, songo tu-id woy moko-ulì koddì su diò to Kapugi nigdolog. As for that saw, it was a year before it returned to me because it ended up in Kapugi. 3v For a group to return home. 4v to reimburse; give [something to someone] in return for [something else] Kagi ni Angelina to, “Uli-id ka sapatus ni Ivy su konò ogko-olog to pa-a ni Ivy.” Og-uli-an ku ka sapatus ni Ivy. I'm going to reimburse Ivy's shoes. [In the following example, Angelina had purchased shoes which did not fit Ivy. So she offered the shoes to Arlyn for her child. Since they were new, she was expecting full reimbursement for what she had paid for the shoes. If the item is new, they will reimbuse the full amount.] 5v To have someone reimburse or give in return for something Og-inso-on ku ko pila ka igpo-ulì din." I'm going to ask how much she will have [me] give her in return [for the shoes]. syn: liwan 1. 6To go somewhere and return the same day. 7v To allow someone to return home, as guests. Ko ogmamagaliug ki, dipindi ko ignangon ta ka tagbaloy ko pila ka allow woy ka ogpo-uli-on. If we are guests, it depends whether we tell the host how many days before he will let us return home. 8v To allow someone to return home. Konò ku ogpomo-uli-on. I will not let them return home. [The following example implies that the persons referred to will not be allowed to return home alive.] 9v To keep on returning something for exchange. 10v To be healed, to get well. 11v To go far off to get food from someone else. Manag-ulì to mundù. [they] are fetching camotes from others. [such as rice, camotes, cassave, bananas or root crops. Implies making a request for these when food is in short supply in one's own area. Term applies even if those going after food return empty-handed.] osyn: angoy.
uran phr.: magakinomù no uran₂. 1n Rain Ko dakol ka uran, ogkaponù ka luang to balutu. If the the [amount of] rain is a lot, the inside of the boat will be filled [with water]. 2v To rain Agpas ka no ogsakoru su maga-an og-uran. Hurry and fetch water because it will soon rain. 3v To be rained on. Ko og-uranan ka homoy, ogkara-atda-at. If the rice is rained on, it will be ruined. 4v Rain in. Ogsosob-ung ka otow to baloy rin to kalan oyow konò ogko-uranan. A person caps his house with a long grass so that it won't rain in. 5deriv n Rainy season. Ko tig-uran to darua no bulan, ka mgo otow ogtayurakon ka mgo pa-a ran ko warò sapatus dan. If it is rainy season for two months, the feet of the people will get a fungus infection if they don't have shoes. Nigpo-uran to kallayag so-i uran. The brightness (god of rice crops) causes it to rain.