napessiu | he is a boy | ninapessiun | I am a boy |
auassiu | s/he is young | apu auassiut | s/he is not young |
Verbs like napessiu and auassiu have stems ending in long u. This stem is stable; the u appears in all verb forms.
The difference between long and short u stems can be heard in the imperative. Verbs with short u stems end in i (not u) in the imperative.
Careful! au stems are also often pronounced as long u [u:] in the western dialects.
pashiku | s/he stands up | pashikui! | stand up! |
kanieu | s/he wins | kanieui! | win! |
kunu | s/he is covered in snow | tshikununau | you (pl) are covered in snow |
uińnu | s/he is fat | nuińnuti | I was fat |
minapu | it (anim) is purple | minapuipan | it (anim) was purple |
uishtu | he has a beard | tshuishtun | you have a beard |
ushiku | s/he is hurt | ushikuńua | s/he (obv) is hurt |
nekau | s/he is covered in sand | ninekaun | I am covered in sand |
ukaumau | she is a mother | tshukaumaunau | you (pl) are mothers |
akaneshau | s/he is English | apu akaneshaut | s/he is not English |
NOTES ON SPELLING |
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