er, prep.indicates specific (as opposed to non-specific) object noun phrase in certain constructions [similar to how 'the' is different from 'a']; used to precede the object of locational, directional, source, temporal, and causal phrases.

in; at; on; to; from; of; out of; because of; for; with; by means of; about.
er
a
a
a
e
el
er
a
ak
er
a
eracont.er a
racont.er a
Examples:
> This baby bird is so pitiful that I'm tying its foot to the top of the starfruit tree.
> He will watch a particular baby/some baby/the baby.
> Where's my purse?
> John doesn't know (how to speak) Chinese.
> Kukumai brought the food to her mother.
Proverbs:
> They are as though eating deldalech.
Deldalech is the material once used to blacken teeth in Palau. When the deldalech was applied it was "eaten" by keeping the mouth and lips completely immobile for several hours until the dye had set. May be applied to a meeting at which some problem is presented for discussion and no discussion takes place, all the participants sitting in stony silence; also to a person or group that receives a reprimand in silence.
> 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.
> A blind man leading another blind man.
The application is identical to that of the familiar English idiom
> Like an old woman who is cautious about coughing and breaking wind.
Among elderly women, it seems, coughing sometimes produces the unwanted effect of breaking wind. The idiom may be applied to any action that might produce an undesirable side effect, such as a hasty decision at a political meeting. As a caution, it suggests the need for leaders to consider all the consequences.
> Like a squatting bat, hanging but looking down.
Bats hang upside down from the tree and may be thought to have an inverted view of things. Refers to a comment or action that is clearly out of line; rarely said of a person who is present, since the implication is that of weak mindedness.
More Examples:
> We went to the rock islands last week.
> Go pluck two leaves from the Purple Viper's-bugloss tree and bring them back here.
> The wind is coming from the southeast.
> A log washed ashore last night.
> Is it OK for me to call you sometime?

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