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Lesson 4 Dialogue

"What is your name?"

Girl: What's your name?Literally, "How is your name?"

Wife: My name is Maki.

Girl: Your name is very prettyLiterally, "good"..

Wife: Thank you.

Girl: Is that knife your knife?

Husband: It is mine.

Girl: May I pull outI.e., draw the knife from its sheath. the knife?

Husband: You mayLiterally, "It's okay"., but the tip is sharp so be careful not to cut your fingersp(e) ne (na) can be used for prohibitions/negative instructions..

Girl: Did you carve both the sheath and the hilt?

Husband: I didn't carve them.

Wife: I carved themThis is a subversion of expectations, because whittling/carving is traditionally a male role in Ainu culture..

Lesson 4 Vocabulary

Ainu English
inep 4 (four)
re,
rehe
name
mak,
makanak
how? in what way?
makanak an? what is? (for some intangible things such as names and prices. Literally means something more like "how is?")
sekor quotation particle (follows a name, quote, thought, etc)
sonno really
iyairaykere thank you
tan this (adjectival)
makiri knife
etaye to pull/draw [out]
korka but
ipe,
ipehe
blade (of a sword or knife)
een to be sharp
askepet,
askepeci,
askepecihi
finger
tuye to cut (singular)
kepuspe,
kepuspehe
sheath, scabbard
nip,
nipi,
nipihi
handle/hilt (of a sword or knife)
nuye to carve, to whittle
ki to do
kani I (first-person singular pronoun)