1.6.4.2. Animal eating

ᦀᦾᧈʔɔj²500verb (transitive)to feedᦀᧁ ᦊᦱ ᦀᦾᧈ.He fed her the medicine.ᦎᦳᧄᧉ ᦃᧁᧉ ᧒ ᦖᦸᧉ ᦀᧁ ᦵᦙᦲ ᦀᦾᧈ ᦖᦴ.She boiled two pots of rice to feed the pigs.5.2.2Eat1.6.4.2Animal eating2.6.4.1.1Care for a babyᦀᦾᧈᦺᦈᦀᦾᧈᦆᦸᦀᦾᧈᦓᦳᧄ
ᦉᦹᧈᦶᦜᧁᧈsɯɯ²læw²nouncommercial animal fodder6.3.1Domesticated animal1.6.4.2Animal eatingChinese饲料si4liao4fodder
ᦉᧅᦎᦸᧆᧈsak²tɔɔt²verb (transitive)to peckᦷᦓᧅ ᦍᦳᧂ ᦅᦸᧉ ᦷᦋ ᦂᧃ ᦉᧅ ᦎᦸᧆᧈ ᧞ ᦃᧇ ᦗᦻᧈ ᦵᦉ.The peacocks pecked him and chased him away.1.6.4.2Animal eatingᦉᧅ2ᦎᦸᧆᧈ
ᦉᦱᧇ1saap²verb (transitive)to catch with the mouth (especially of animals such as frog, snake, duck)ᦵᦔᧆ ᦉᦱᧇ ᦀᧁ ᦔᦱ, ᦡᧄ ᦗᦸᧅ ᦺᦐ ᦺᦡᧉ ᦷᦎ ᧚.The duck was catching fish, each time it dove under it caught one.1.6.4.2Animal eating1.6.4Animal actionsᦉᦱᧇᦎᦸᧆᧈᦉᦱᧇᦡᦾᧉ
ᦵᦊᦲᧈjɤɤ²2000nounfood (especially food of animals)ᦵᦉᦲ ᦷᦆᧂᧈ ᦂᧃᧉ ᦵᦊᦲᧈ ᦺᦡᧉ ᧗ ᦞᧃ.The tiger had lacked food for seven days.5.2Food1.6.4.2Animal eatingᦵᦊᦲᧈᦁᦱᦠᦱᧃᦵᦊᦲᧈᦔᦱ
ᦵᦊᦲᧈᦁᦱᦠᦱᧃjɤɤ²ʔahaan¹nounfood (usually of animals)ᦔᦱ ᦠᧃ ᦺᦉᧈ ᦏᦱᧂᧈ ᦞᦱᧈ ᦔᦲᧃ ᦵᦊᦲᧈ ᦁᦱ ᦠᦱᧃ ᧞ ᦟᦾ ᦙᦱ ᦅᦱᧇ.A fish saw it and thought it was food, so it swam over and grabbed it in its mouth.5.2Food1.6.4.2Animal eatingᦵᦊᦲᧈᦁᦱᦠᦱᧃ
ᦌᦸᧄᧉᦵᦀᦲᧂᧉsɔm⁶ʔɤŋ³verb (intransitive)to chew the cud (cattle)ᦶᦢᧉ ᦌᦸᧄᧉ ᦵᦀᦲᧂᧉ.The goat was chewing its cud.1.6.4.2Animal eatingᦌᦸᧄᧉ1ᦵᦀᦲᧂᧉ
ᦶᦍᧄᧉjæm⁶1verb (intransitive)to open a little bit2verb (intransitive)to smile3.5.6.3Facial expression3verb (transitive)to chew (of insects)ᦶᦙᧂ ᦉᦱᧇ ᦋᦱᧂᧈ ᦷᦃᧇ ᦶᦍᧄᧉ ᦵᦉᦲᧉ ᦕᦱᧉ.Cockroaches can chew up our clothes.1.6.4.2Animal eating4verb (transitive)to chop (as meat), rocking a cleaver with both hands7.8.3Cutᦋᦳᧄᧈᦶᦍᧄᧉᦶᦍᧄᧉᦶᦍᧄᧉ
ᦣᦱᧂhaaŋ⁴1nountrough; grooveᦣᦱᧂ ᦖᦴ.Pig feed trough.ᦵᦔᧆ ᦠᦱ ᦃᧁᧉ ᦷᦠ ᦣᦱᧂ ᦵᦗᦲᧃᧈ ᦀᦾᧈ.The ducks eat from the trough where people feed them.1.6.4.2Animal eating8.3.2.5Furrow2classifierclassifier for troughsᦖᦴ ᦂᦲᧃ ᦎᦲᧄ ᧓ ᦣᦱᧂ.The pigs ate everything in all three troughs.9.2.6.1Classifiersᦎᧁᦣᦱᧂᦣᦱᧂᦟᦲᧃ