Word search

Input language:

Search Results for: a

Pages (386 of 1488):«Prev 385 [386] 387 Next»
Displayed 11550 - 11580 of 44635
  • mêstasow ᒣᐢᑕᓱᐤ VAI s/he saps trees, s/he takes the juice of trees by scraping the inner bark (CW)
  • mêskanaw ᒣᐢᑲᓇᐤ NI road, path (CW)
  • mêsciham ᒣᐢᒋᐦᐊᒼ VTI s/he gets rid of all of s.t. (CW)
  • mâyâtan ᒫᔮᑕᐣ VII it is bad, it is evil; it is ugly (CW)
  • mâyatihk ᒫᔭᑎᕁ NA sheep (CW)
  • mâyamêk ᒫᔭᒣᐠ NA catfish (CW)
  • mâwasako ᒫᐊᐧᓴᑯ IPC all together (CW)
  • mâwacîs ᒫᐊᐧᒌᐢ IPC all (CW)
  • mâtamêw ᒫᑕᒣᐤ VTA s/he starts to eat s.o. (CW)
  • mâtahtam ᒫᑕᐦᑕᒼ VTI s/he starts to eat s.t. (CW)
  • mâskikan ᒫᐢᑭᑲᐣ NDI chest, breast (CW)
  • mâmawaci ᒫᒪᐊᐧᒋ IPC most, the very most (CW)
  • mâkwaham ᒫᑲᐧᐦᐊᒼ VTI s/he presses s.t. down (by tool) (CW)
  • mâkwaciw ᒫᑲᐧᒋᐤ VAI s/he is oppressed by cold (CW)
  • mâkoskam ᒫᑯᐢᑲᒼ VTI s/he steps on s.t., s/he presses s.t. down (CW)
  • mâhtinam ᒫᐦᑎᓇᒼ VTI s/he moves s.t. (CW)
  • mâhiskam ᒫᐦᐃᐢᑲᒼ VTI s/he goes downstream to trading post for supplies; s/he goes to the store (CW)
  • mâcistan ᒫᒋᐢᑕᐣ VII it is a thawing river (CW)
  • mayâskam ᒪᔮᐢᑲᒼ VTI s/he passes s.t. walking (CW)
  • mawisowin ᒪᐃᐧᓱᐃᐧᐣ NI berry picking (CW)
  • mawimowin ᒪᐃᐧᒧᐃᐧᐣ NI dissatisfaction, complaining; cry of pain (CW)
  • matwêsin ᒪᑌᐧᓯᐣ VAI s/he falls or steps audibly at a distance; s/he is heard falling down (as a clock striking is heard) (CW)
  • matwêham ᒪᑌᐧᐦᐊᒼ VTI s/he hammers s.t. causing a sound audible at a distance (CW)
  • matotisiw ᒪᑐᑎᓯᐤ VAI s/he goes into a sweat-lodge, s/he sweats him/herself; s/he takes a steam bath (CW)
  • maskwamiy ᒪᐢᑲᐧᒥᕀ NA ice (CW)
  • maskotêw ᒪᐢᑯᑌᐤ NI prairie; plain; Muskoday First Nation, SK (CW)
  • maskosîs ᒪᐢᑯᓰᐢ NI small amount of straw, short grass (CW)
  • maskihkiy ᒪᐢᑭᐦᑭᕀ NI herb, plant; medicine; chemicals (CW)
  • maskawâw ᒪᐢᑲᐋᐧᐤ VII it is strong, it is hard (CW)
  • maskamêw ᒪᐢᑲᒣᐤ VTA s/he grabs (it/him) from s.o., s/he robs s.o. (of it/him), s/he takes (it/him) away from s.o. (CW)
Pages (386 of 1488): «Prev 385 [386] 387 Next»
Online Cree Dictionary partially funded by the Government of Canada through the Department of Canadian Heritage