For a living being, an object (actor -um- & theme) to move; sway; shake, as a tree or house in a wind; the earth during an earthquake; the body due to cold or sickness.
Immīwih tun lutah din immalyogāna.
This earth shook during that time when there was an earthquake.
Move (īwi) Verbs
elah 2 |
‘constantly move’ |
galewgew |
‘tremble (of the body)’ |
gewol |
‘move back and forth (of something anchored at one end)’ |
halewāwod |
‘shake (of grass, plants, trees)’ |
kellob |
‘twist or roll slightly’ |
lewong 1 |
‘turn’ |
li''āyun |
‘shake (of a house)’ |
niwniw 2 |
‘ripple (of water)’ |
oyog |
‘shiver (with cold)’ |
walegweg |
‘tremble (of the body)’ |
walwod |
‘move (of something loosely anchored at one end)’ |
wigwig |
‘tremble (of the extremities)’ |
witīwit |
‘swish, wag (the tail)’ |
wogot |
‘shake back and forth’ |
wogwog 2 |
‘shake (of the body with sickness)’ |
yobod |
‘spring up and down (of a resilient object)’ |
yu''āyu' |
‘sway back and forth (of something securely anchored at one end)’ |
For a person, something as the wind (actor -umipa-) to move, sway, shake something (theme ipa-), as described above.
Tinnig'uh Uddāpon an inumbun ya impa'iwi'īwinay hu'īna.
I saw Uddāpon sitting down and he continually moved his foot (back and forth in a swinging motion).