jaʼ - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Article Images
jaʼ
- Susanne Schüle, Perception verb complements in Akatek, a Mayan language, citing Zavala (1992)
jaʼ
- Chol Texts on the Supernatural (1965), page 159
jaʼ
- Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Chʼortiʼ - castellano, page 35, 2000
jaʼ
- Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Itza - castellano, page 31, 2010
jaʼ
- amaʼ jaʼ (“liquor; aguardiente”)
- -be jaʼ (“riverbed”)
- binel jaʼ (“rivulet; stream; river”)
- binik p-wiʼ ri jaʼ (“to float”)
- boq jaʼ (“to sweat”)
- bulqʼat jaʼ (“flood”)
- chuqʼlij ri jaʼ (“to splash”)
- el jaʼ (“to sweat”)
- el jaʼ cho -palaj (“to sweat on face”)
- el pa jaʼ (“to sweat”)
- jaʼ poqʼ (“water blister”)
- jaʼ tew (“frozen”)
- jaʼ -wäch (“liquid; in liquid form”)
- jaʼ(o) (“to water”)
- jaʼaj (“to give water to; to water”)
- jaʼj (“to water”)
- jaʼnik (“to water”)
- jorona jaʼ (“cold water”)
- kʼiyibal jaʼ (“spring, fountain”)
- kʼo jaʼ ch-pam (“to have diarrhea”)
- -kʼoxil jaʼ (“well of water”)
- kokʼjaʼnik (“to drink”)
- nim -ib pa jaʼ (“to dive”)
- nim jaʼ (“river”)
- qʼän jaʼ (“blister”)
- qʼatbal jaʼ (“dam”)
- qʼor jaʼ (“atole”)
- qaj (ch-)xe jaʼ (“to sink”)
- qasaj jaʼ p-wiʼ (“to baptize by sprinkling”)
- qasaj xeʼ jaʼ (“to baptize; to submerge in water”)
- qasbal jaʼ (“rainy season”)
- relibal jaʼ (“fountain; spring”)
- -sibal jaʼ (“stream”)
- siwan be jaʼ (“ravine, gorge”)
- sutbal jaʼ (“whirlpool”)
- tix jaʼ ch-ij (“to water”)
- torbal jaʼ (“plug (to drain water)”)
- tzalam siwan p-turbal jaʼ (“waterfall”)
- tzaq jaʼ (“to sweat”)
- tzaya jaʼ (“brackish water”)
- u-qajibal jaʼ (“waterfall”)
- -uxlab jaʼ (“steam; water vapor”)
- wa jaʼ (“nourishment (general term for all food and drink”)
- -wo jaʼ (“flood; overflow of river”)
- Allen J. Christenson, Kʼiche-English dictionary
jaʼ
- Alternative form of ʼjaʼ
- Arnulfo Estrada Ramírez, Leonor Farldow Espinoza, Diccionario práctico de la lengua kiliwa (2004, Instituto nacional de lenguas indígenas; Ensenada, B.C., Mexico)), page 106
jaʼ
- Fisher, William Morrison (1973). Towards the Reconstruction of Proto-Yucatec, Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago
jaʼ
- Victor Juárez Jiménez, Itsʼbal chu tsʼiba we tookʼ didaaktika mochoʼ, Kabil siiklo, Gramática didáctica mochoʼ. Segundo ciclo (2013, México, INALI)
jaʼ
- ok jaʼ (“river; current”)
jaʼ
- Hofling, Charles Andrew (2011). Mopan Maya–Spanish–English Dictionary, University of Utah Press.
jaʼ
- Kathryn C. Keller, Diccionario Chontal de Tabasco, Summer Institute of Linguistics (1997), page 471
jaʼ
- Carlos Lenkersdorf, Tojolabal para principiantes, lengua y cosmovision mayas en Chiapas (1994, México, CRT)
jaʼ
- water
- Tzeltal language learning guide, page 11:
Ya cuchʼ jaʼ
- I drink water
- Tzeltal language learning guide, page 11:
jaʼ
- Miguel Angel Vicente Méndez, Diccionario bilingüe uspanteko-español, page 93, 2007
jaʼ
From Proto-Mayan *haʼ.
jaʼ (plural jaʼob)
- Academia de la Lengua Maya de Yucatán, A. C. (2003) Diccionario maya popular: Maya-español, español-maya (in Spanish), →ISBN, page 69: “JAʼ”
- Barrera Vásquez, Alfredo et al. (1980) Diccionario maya Cordemex: Maya-español, español-maya (in Spanish), Mérida: Ediciones Cordemex, page 165: “HAʼ”
- Beltrán de Santa Rosa María, Pedro (1746) Arte de el idioma maya reducido a succintas reglas, y semilexicon yucateco (in Spanish), Mexico: Por la Biuda de D. Joseph Bernardo de Hogal, page 178: “Agua. .... Haa.”
- Montgomery, John (2004) Maya-English, English-Maya (Yucatec) Dictionary & Phrasebook, New York: Hippocrene Books, Inc., →ISBN, page 57: “haʼ”
- Pío Pérez, Juan (1866–1877) Diccionario de la lengua maya (in Spanish), Mérida de Yucatán: Imprenta literaria, de Juan F. Molina Solís, page 105: “HÁ: agua”