ewontö
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Ye'kwana
[edit]ALIV | ewontö |
---|---|
Brazilian standard | ewontä |
New Tribes | ewontä |
Pronunciation
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]From e- (intransitivizer) + wontö (“to clothe”).
Verb
[edit]ewontö
- (intransitive, patientive) to put on clothes, to get dressed
- Synonym: ensöma'tö
Etymology 2
[edit]Verb
[edit]ewontö (transitive)
- to refuse to hand (something) over or surrender (something)
- to defend (someone or something) (+ -uwö: against, from)
- 2008, speaker ‘Anl’ from Boca de Piña (ConvChur.016), recorded in Cáceres, Natalia (2011), Grammaire Fonctionelle-Typologique du Ye’kwana, page 144:
- Unwa kowontaato yadanawiuwö yeichü.
- She defends us there (in the city) from the way of being of the non-natives.
- 2008, speaker ‘Anl’ from Boca de Piña (ConvChur.016), recorded in Cáceres, Natalia (2011), Grammaire Fonctionelle-Typologique du Ye’kwana, page 144:
Derived terms
[edit]References
[edit]- Cáceres, Natalia (2011) “ewontö”, in Grammaire Fonctionnelle-Typologique du Ye’kwana[1], Lyon
- Hall, Katherine Lee (1988) The morphosyntax of discourse in De'kwana Carib, volumes I and II, Saint Louis, Missouri: PhD Thesis, Washington University, pages 138, 402: “w-e-wo:ntö-nö ¶ to dress oneself […] wewontönö - to dress”
- Hall, Katherine (2007) “wewontənə”, in Mary Ritchie Key & Bernard Comrie, editors, The Intercontinental Dictionary Series[2], Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, published 2021