kom
/ko
, pro.you (nonemphatic, plural).
ko
a
ko
ko
mo
er
ker
e
ko
mla
Examples:
> Droteo should just be arriving in Guam.
> said Charlotte, to sort of give Wilbur courage.
> You're like a starling (i.e. you do something undesirable and later deny it or make excuses about it).
> My car is really getting old and is making rattling noises.
> We are completely uninformed because we don't know any information (about that).
Proverbs:
> You're a flying kite, but i hold the guide string.
No matter how much you play around, you always come back to me.
> Like kaldos, putting medicine on a well place, rather than the injury.
Kaldos is a medical treatment, said by some to have been learned from the Germans, in which medicine is applied to a parallel member of an injured part in a way that is supposed to transfer pain to an uninjured place. The idiom is applied to a decision or action that completely misses the point or problem.
> It's like when the men of Ngesias clamored over what they had lost (after a party of raiders had attacked without warning and taken a head as a trophy).
The men of the Ngesias (Peleliu) village club were sitting near their clubhouse one evening when raiders broke through the brush, shouted wildly, and excaped with the head of one of them. When they recovered their senses, the men jumped to their spears and shouted threats into the darkness of the surrounding brush. Aroused by the commotion, the village chief appeared and ,when appraised of the situation, admonished them to be quiet since the fuss would gain nothing. "Don't cry over spilt milk."
> You're like a stinkbug that burns itself in the fire.
i.e., you get involved in things that may hurt you.
> Like a pigeon-seeing the danger, yet it flies from cover
The pigeon sits quietly concealed until some threat appears, then it flies out, revealing itself. The idiom applies to a person who unnecessarily exposes himself to danger, leaves the house in the rain, or takes a boat out in a storm.
More Examples:
> Be honest and say you don't want to go instead of going and then regretting it.
> She looks so beautiful with her traditional grass skirt and decorations except her lips look inside out with that lipstick.
> You are like the clam of bengall, never moves an inch but always adored.
> John is taking too long and his wife is "like a decorated lobster" waiting for him.
> Honey, cant you pound some taro so we could eat?

Search for another word: