Karuk Dictionary
by William Bright and Susan Gehr (© Karuk Tribe)
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ikvátar / ikvátan- to go get sweathouse wood
Dictionary Entry
lexicon ID #2183 | revised Nov 12 2014
ikvátar / ikvátan- • V • to go get sweathouse wood
Derivation: | ikvat-ar |
carry.on.shoulder-go.to |
- yítha vúra máh'iit tóokfuuksip ikmaháchraam, tookvátar. One person gets up early in the morning in the sweathouse, he goes and gets sweathouse wood. [Reference: TK 200.3]
Sentence examples (4)
Display mode: sentence | word | word components
-
uum vúra itíhaan kumamáh'iit tóo kvátar,
itukuk'afishríhan.
The young man of itúkuk went gathering sweathouse wood every morning.Source: Nettie Ruben, "The Boy from Itúkuk" (WB_KL-57) | read full text -
imáankam kumamáh'iit kúkuum vúra ukvátar.
The next morning he rowed across again.Source: Nettie Ruben, "The Boy from Itúkuk" (WB_KL-57) | read full text -
xás uxus, "
tîi kanpikvátan pananípaah."
And he thought, "Let me go get my boat!"Source: Nettie Ruben, "The Boy from Itúkuk" (WB_KL-57) | read full text -
xás mah'íitnihach uum vúrava ukvatankôotih.
So he always went early in the morning to gather sweathouse wood.Source: Nettie Ruben, "The Boy from Itúkuk" (WB_KL-57) | read full text