Dictionary entry
pew • vn • cook
Lexicon record # 2552 | Source reference: R238
Semantic
domain: food, drink, and cooking
Sentence examples (7)
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'Iee, skueykok' 'ne-pew.
Yes, I'm a good cook.| Download — Georgiana Trull, Yurok Language Conversation Book, chapter 3: "Are you hungry?" (GT3-03, 2003)
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'Iee, nekomuey 'ne-pew.
Yes, I know how to cook.| Download — Georgiana Trull, Yurok Language Conversation Book, chapter 3: "Are you hungry?" (GT3-03, 2003)
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Skewom' k'e-pew.
Your cooking smells good.| Download | Password required — Florence Shaughnessy, Sentences (LA138-015) (LA138-015, 1980)
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Kol' sook keetee 'ne-pew.
I'm going to cook something.| Download | Password required — Florence Shaughnessy, Sentences (LA138-029) (LA138-029, 1980)
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Keech 'o ho'op' kee pew keetee kol' nep'.
He had made a fire and was going to cook something to eat.— Florence Shaughnessy, "Two Boys Kill a Donkey" (LA181-16, 1986)
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'O gee' cho', Knokseemem' kue 'woogey son k'e-slekw; kolchee wohlkechee' tue' ko' 'o nerrgersem', weet kee chpee 'o nepem' kue meweemor 'we-romech 'ue-pewomek', 'ohlkuemee wok kem neeko'hl 'w-ohkepek' tue' wok kee chpee pew mehl kue nee'eeyen pegerk.
He was told, Leave behind your white man's type of clothes; every morning you will gather sweathouse wood, and you will only eat the old man's niece's cooking, because she too was always in training and she alone cooked for the two men.— Florence Shaughnessy, "The First Salmon Rite at Wehlkwew" (LA16-8, 1951)
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K'e-pew skewom'.
Your cooking smells good.— Various speakers, Sentences in R. H. Robins's Yurok Language (YL, 1951)
