For something crooked, as a tree, betel palm, posture of a person (actor muɴ-, -um- & patient) to become straight.
Immandong din pinikun di pūo' an intanom'un āyiw.
The tree which I planted which the storm made crooked became straight.
For something (patient ma-) to be straight, of a longitudinal object or line, as of a tree, one's legs, a boundary, the base of a stone wall.
For someone (agent; s agent maN-) to straighten something (patient i-, -on) crooked; to do something to a linear object (patient i-, -on) in a straight line, as to lay foundation stones in a straight line with the optional use of an appropriate instrument (inst paN-).
Inandong Buy'a an hinaphāpan din inyamma' an tū'ud ti napiku.
Buy'a straightened by chopping the foundation post I made because it was crooked.
Occurs as part of a verb chain, see sec. 7.19.
Inyandong'un nangiyammah nan dālan hi owon an umuy hi hogbon.
I made the trail in a straight line, which is the way going to the spring (lit; I did in a straight line my making of the trail).
ma'andong.
cmpr. ma'an'andong; sup. ma''andong, ma''an'andong.
Straight; i.e., not crooked.
Immūya' hi inalāhan ya inah'ūpa' din ma'andong an dālan ya hiyay inunud'u.
I went to the forest and I found a straight path and so it was what I followed.