kom
/ko
, pro.you (nonemphatic, plural).
ko
a
ko
ko
mo
er
ker
e
ko
mla
Examples:
> You're like a starling (i.e. you do something undesirable and later deny it or make excuses about it).
> You're not paying any attention (i.e. it's as if you were sleeping).
> Something's wrong between Satsko and Tony.
> They are like greedy dogs that never get enough.
> You take a shower really fast.
Proverbs:
> It's like the case of Beriber and Chemaredong (who for a long time lived in adjacent caves unaware of each other's existence but who finally discovered each other and began to share their surpluces).
People wasting things and not sharing or cooperating as they should. Cooperative reciprocity among equals should be patterned on that exemplified by these two men. Beriber, who harvested coconut syrup, and Chemaredong, who was an expert fish trapper, lived in two small caves near the village of Oikuul in Airai (central Palau). These caves are side by side, separated by a natural wall about one foot thick. However, for a long time the neighbors did not know that the other existed. Finally, they discovered one another, and from that time on they engaged in mutually profiitable exchange of their surpluses in fish and syrup. An elder source said that this is more than a proverb (blukul a tekoi) and referred to it as ollach idnger, the "law of neighborliness."
> You're like the Ngcheangel banana (meduch a ngerel).
You're all talk and no action).
> Like eating a forked taro corm.
Taro (Colocasia esculenta) generally grows like a single fat carrot. Some corms, however, develop one or more points or forks. The image conveyed by this idiom is that of a man beset by many tasks, trying to decide among them.
> Like the man of Ngerechemai, who lost his turtle and lost his canoe.
Relates to a fisherman who jumped from his canoe to catch a turtle only to find that his canoe had drifted beyond recovery. Applies to any situation where a person fails at a task, or, aptly, to a situation where a man, through his own foolishness, loses both his wife and his mistress.
> You're a flying kite, but i hold the guide string.
No matter how much you play around, you always come back to me.
More Examples:
> The silhouette of that woman is very attractive.
> Have you all agreed what we will be doing tomorrow?
> Honey, cant you pound some taro so we could eat?
> I am so starving.
> Your clothes are piled up like you're a snake shedding its skin.

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