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'''{{tp|ewe}}''' is {{a category|ewe}} [[post-pu|post-{{tp|pu}}]] [[content word]] and {{tp|[[nimi sin]]}} relating to stone, gravel, rock, pebbles, lava, and magma. It is contrasted by limiting {{tp|kiwen}}'s [[semantic space]] to metal and hardness. |
'''{{tp|ewe}}''' is {{a category|ewe}} [[post-pu|post-{{tp|pu}}]] [[content word]] and {{tp|[[nimi sin]]}} relating to stone, gravel, rock, pebbles, lava, and magma. It is contrasted by limiting {{tp|[[kiwen]]}}'s [[semantic space]] to metal and hardness. |
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==Etymology== |
==Etymology== |
Revision as of 12:25, 13 January 2024
Pronunciation | /ˈe |
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Usage | 2023: Not notable (1% ↘︎ ) Most speakers don't understand this word.2022: Obscure (2%) |
Book and era | nimi ku lili (post-pu) |
Part of speech | Content word |
ewe is a marginal post-pu content word and nimi sin relating to stone, gravel, rock, pebbles, lava, and magma. It is contrasted by limiting kiwen's semantic space to metal and hardness.
Etymology
It was coined by jan ko in 2019.
sitelen pona
The sitelen pona glyph for ewe (ewe) is derived from turning that of kiwen (kiwen).