mengoit, v.t.throw away; abandon; spend (money) unnecessarily; contribute (money at ocheraol); divorce; skip (school); quit/give up (habit); abolish; disregard or disobey (order, someone's words, etc.).
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choitiiv.pf.3s
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er
chilitiiv.pf.3s.past
chemoitv.pf.3p.inan.
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mla
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er
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chiloitv.pf.3p.inan.past
chachoitv.recip.leave each other behind; divorce each other.
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chelitangv.r.s.inch.
cheloitv.r.s.thrown away; abandoned; discarded; (money) spent unnecessarily.
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chiitel
/chitall
v.a.s.is to be thrown away or abandoned.
mechitangv.erg.inch.beginning to be abandoned.
mechoitv.erg.
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mo
See also:
Examples:
> Are you satisfied (sexually)?
> He's bought his car so he's bicycle is now left unused.
> I nearly got left behind by the plane.
> By deceit the king will win the support of those who have already abandoned their religion.
> The husband and kids are being ignored/neglected because he's so occupied with his work.
Proverbs:
> Disposing the group at Ngetkeuang.
The saying pertains to a situation that occurred at Ngetkeuang, a hamlet in Peleliu. Some members of a group about to sail north were already at the docks ready to board their canoes and set sail with a good strong wind from the south, slightly at an angle to the course they would follow and ideal for sailing. Impatient, the group at the dock finally left the remainder behind and the wind was so strong that they were soon well on their way. The phrase is applied to a wind that is strong, steady, and from the south, like a steady "tradewind"
> Your mother's brother's head is discarded at Emerert.
In head-hunting days villages on the same side-haven as Koror, or otherwise allied, would visit Koror last with heads taken in raids or ambush after visiting several allied villages for dances and money collections marking a successful hunt. By and large, the purpose of head-hunting was economic, with money paid the men of the successful raiding club at each allied village where the heads would be displayed. The collection went to the coffer of their village chief. By the time the warriors reached Koror, then, the heads would often be quite odorous and unpleasant (economically useless). So they would be discarded at a place called Emerert in Koror. From the standpoint of any male ego the mother's brother (okdemaol; okdemelem: your mother's brother) is always significant, since one such individual usually acts as guardian and financial advisor for the younger clan member. The idiom, then, is used by the people of Koror to insult persons of other, generally hostile, villages.
> 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.
More Examples:
> She is very fond of me and therefore left everything and came here.
> The spirits knew that our home land is becoming deserted.
> My garden has been neglected and has become badly overgrown. It needs to be cleared.
telil, n.poss.3sbreath.
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telikn.poss.1s
telimn.poss.2s
telmamn.poss.1pe
telidn.poss.1pi
telmiun.poss.2p
telrirn.poss.3p
kedeb a telilexpr.short-winded.
kemanget a telilexpr.capable of holding one's breath (e.g. under water) for a long time.
medebdobd a telilexpr.
Ng
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mengoit a telilexpr.give one's last breath; die; expire.
telil a beluuexpr.village leaders.
telil a chimexpr.pulse.
See also:
Examples:
> He's breathing heavily or gasping for breath (from exhaustion).
Proverbs:
> The taro field is the mother of our life
Not only is taro an important staple in the Palauan diet, but a serving of taro is essential at any feast and taro is the essential food in a food-money exchange. Its importance is recognized in this idiom.

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