kom
/ko
, pro.you (nonemphatic, plural).
ko
a
ko
ko
mo
er
ker
e
ko
mla
Examples:
> Are you going by car?
> His or her face is ugly.
> Have you walked on the floor of the ocean?
> It smells just like a flower.
> Droteo is rather undecided about travelling to Hawaii.
Proverbs:
> You're like the stork which flies with its legs dangling.
You leave unfinished business behind and split.
> You're like a fish bait which can be eaten or pecked from the top and bottom.
You don't know what to do because chores keep coming in from left and right.
> Like the purple swamp hen, flying off with its legs hanging down
The purple swamp hen (uek; other sources name another bird, sechou [heron]) is careless about its legs when it flies, letting them dangle in flight instead of neatly tucking them up like other, more trim flyers. The saying applies to persons who do sloppy work or carelessly leave a task half finished
> He's like the road in Ngerebodel (which doesn't go anywhere in particular)
i.e. he's expanding a lot of effort but not getting anywhere. There was once, in the hamlet of Ngerebodl (in Koror, central Palau), reputedly a very fine boulder path which began and ended nowhere in particular. The idiom may describe a person who seems to be working hard toward no apparent objective
> Like Ngiramesemong, rehashing what has been finished.
Pertains to a person who repeatedly reminds another of past favors or continually recalls the mistakes of others. (My sources no longer recalled the episode or story from which this idiom derives.)
More Examples:
> The Chinese ship finally sailed out last month.
> She looks so beautiful with her traditional grass skirt and decorations except her lips look inside out with that lipstick.
> Your clothes are piled up like you're a snake shedding its skin.
> John is taking too long and his wife is "like a decorated lobster" waiting for him.
> The silhouette of that woman is very attractive.

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