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keyeixapai. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
keyeixapai, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
keyeixapai in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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Wauja
Pronunciation
Verb
keyeixapai
- (intransitive) he/she/it is industrious, is energetic
- Kapaipiyapai ipitsi amunaunki. Meyeixapai tumapai ulepe, meyeixapai tumapai usixui pessoalnaun ou. Oukaka Walama akapojatene inyaun wi: "Natu amunaunpei, maka aitsa natu numeiyeixa. Maka Arawi keyeixapai tumapai ulepe, usixui." En, umapai okapojala katahan...
- This is the kapojai song that Walama sang . had grown weary of his chiefly responsibilities. He no longer bothered to make bread to distribute as a ceremonial sponsor; nor did he bother to make manioc porridge to give his people to drink. So Walama sang in his kapojai song: "Let me be chief; I won't be lazy. My wife Arawi is industrious; she'll make plenty of manioc bread and porridge." Eh, here’s how his song goes...
Usage notes
Re: "Kapaipiyapai ipitsi": Note that Aruta tosses in a noun borrowed from Portuguese ("pessoal," people, followers), but he adds the Wauja plural suffix –naun, so that it becomes pessoalnaun (all the people). The Wauja have several words Aruta could have used instead (opukenejo, inyaunaun), but he chose to use a dash of Portuguese in this statement.
Antonyms
- meyeixapai (he/she/it is lazy, indolent, disinclined)
Derived terms
See also
References
- "Kapaipiyapai ipitsi" uttered by Aruta, storyteller and elder, recounting Wauja history in the presence of his son and nephew. Recorded in Piyulaga village by E. Ireland, 4/25/96, transcript page 26.