Lexeme Entries
Word | Macy | Part of Speech | Source Definition | Created Date | Last Modified | Last Modified By | Dorsey slip | Actions |
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á-kí-naⁿ-bé-bȼiⁿ | ákʰínoⁿbébthiⁿ | To be twisted together. | 9/3/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.024.09c.jpg |
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á-ḳi-naⁿ-ȼú-jĕ | ákinoⁿthúzhe | To step on a vessel containing a liquid, causing its contents to be spilled on himself. | 10/8/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak%28x%29/opd.01.026.10c.jpg |
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á-ki-náⁿ-saⁿ | ákʰinóⁿsoⁿ | 9/3/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.024.09b.jpg |
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á-ki-pa | ákʰipʰa | To meet a person, etc. | 9/3/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.024.09d.jpg |
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á-ki-p̣á-gȼai | ákʰipágthai | They hesitate or draw back through rear or shame of one another. | 9/3/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.025.02b.jpg |
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á-ḳi-pa-qpá-ȼĕ | ákipʰaqpáthe | To (make it) fall through between them, as when one person demurs if asked to do something, another refuses in a like manner, and so it happens that neither one does it, and it fails. | 10/8/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak%28x%29/opd.01.026.10b.jpg |
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á-ki-pa-san-de | ákʰipʰasoⁿde | To fasten, as a blanket, by running the thong or thread from one side to the other through the whole length, as when the ends or sides of the blanket are brought together. | 9/3/09 | 7/16/11, 12:29 AM | Catherine Rudin | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.025.01d.jpg |
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á-ki-pa-san-de atíi | ákʰipʰasoⁿde atʰíi | They come hither (not their home), and meet each other. | 9/3/09 | 7/16/11, 12:30 AM | Catherine Rudin | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.024.10c.jpg |
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á-ki-pa-san-de i-ȼáⁿ-ȼĕ | ákʰipʰasoⁿde ithóⁿthe | To place two or more curved objects, books, etc., so that they touch one another at the ends. | 9/3/09 | 7/16/11, 12:32 AM | Catherine Rudin | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.024.10c.jpg |
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á-ki-pa-san-de i-ȼé-ĕ | ákʰipʰasoⁿde ithée | To cause two or more objects or persons to meet one another or come together suddenly. | 9/3/09 | 7/16/11, 12:30 AM | Catherine Rudin | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.024.10b.jpg |
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á-ki-pa-san-de i-hé-ȼĕ | ákʰipʰasoⁿde ihéthe | To place two or more horizontal objects, boards, etc., so as to make them touch at their ends. | 9/3/09 | 7/16/11, 12:32 AM | Catherine Rudin | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.024.10d.jpg |
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á-ki-pa-san-de i-té-ȼĕ | ákʰipʰasoⁿde itʰéthe | To place two or more standing objects so as to make their sides touch. | 9/3/09 | 7/16/11, 12:32 AM | Catherine Rudin | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.025.01a.jpg |
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á-ki-pa-sáⁿ-dai | ákʰipʰasóⁿdai | The opposite of akic̸ahai--they come together, they meet. | 9/3/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.024.10a.jpg |
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á-ki-pa-t'ú | ákʰipʰat'ú | To collide: said of two objects. | 9/3/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.025.01b.jpg |
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á-ki-pá-tĕ | ákʰipʰátʰe | To sew across; to sew two things together. | 9/3/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.025.01c.jpg |
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á-ḳi-p̣a-tcí-je | ákipachʰízhe | To push himself ahead, in spite of oppositions, regardless of consequences to others or to himself, as a bad man might do, who fears not to commit a wrong. | 10/8/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak%28x%29/opd.01.026.10d.jpg |
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á-ḳi-p̣a-záⁿ | ákipazóⁿ | What mixes or associates with its own kind or class. | 10/8/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Catherine Rudin | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak%28x%29/opd.01.027.01a.jpg |
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á-ḳi-p̣a-zaⁿ-ȼáⁿ-ȼaⁿ i-té-ȼĕ | ákipazoⁿthóⁿthoⁿ itʰéthe | To place homogeneous objects in each heap or collection, as corn in one, potatoes in another, pumpkins in a third, and so on; to place every object of one class by itself; homogeneous things being in their respective heaps. | 10/8/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Catherine Rudin | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak%28x%29/opd.01.027.01c.jpg |
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á-ḳi-p̣á-zu | ákipázu | To point to himself. | 10/8/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak%28x%29/opd.01.027.01b.jpg |
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á-ki-pa-zú-i | ákʰipʰazúi | They point to one another. | 9/3/09 | 12/22/10, 5:33 PM | Jacob Hilton | http://omahalanguage.unl.edu/dictionary_images/ak/opd.01.025.02a.jpg |
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