kede, pro.we/us (nonemphatic, includes listener).
a
kerdicont.kede di
Examples:
> Whenever I'm with you, it seems as if we're always going from one thing to another.
> He just walks around naked so we can all see all of his parts.
> Shall we visit her tonight?
> what shall we do (now)?
> We've got a money-raising party coming up.
More Examples:
> We should chew homegrown tobacco.
> We use cups to drink.
> We use kerosene stove to cook food.
> I didn't really realize that we are so darn stubborn.
> Because of the love between us we care about each other's well being.
mekerang, v.i.do what?
a
ng
kau
ke
kede mekerangexpr.what shall we do (now)?
Examples:
> How do Palauans make pottery?
> I'm not going to do anything to you./I'm not going to hurt you.
> What did you do yesterday?
> How did the boy fall?
> If it were you, what would you do?
Proverbs:
> You pluck the fruit and pick it up; what of us?
Why don't you share or let us participate in your activity?/Why are you the only one to laugh at your joke? Usually one person climbs the tree or uses a long stick to knock down the fruit while an assistant shares the task and rewards by catching the falling fruit or picking it up. The saying may be applied to a person who prepares something to eat by himself, then eats it without sharing. It can apply also to a person who laughs at his own joke, leaving his audience unmoved.
More Examples:
> What am I doing?
> What do we use pot holders for?
> If you want to travel somewhere that you have never been before, what will you do?

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