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pen'ol
-iɴ-
1
A vegetation mound, piled on a pond-field bund or in an unplanted pond field.
Nan pen'ol di maphod hi pangitamman hi lagotta.
A vegetation mound is a good place to plant mustard greens.
Decayed weeds and grass from the upper wall of a pond field and decayed stubble are used as the base of the mound. On this are piled pond-field water plants, ha'ha'lung, and creeping water plants, uli'lip, to round out the mound. This provides a fertile medium for growing vegetables. The following are among the vegetables grown in vegetation mounds: garlic, amput; black nightshade, amti; onion, danggu; mustard, lakutta; cabbage, lipulyu; Chinese cabbage, pitsay.
2
For someone (agent muɴ-) to make a vegetation mound (theme) on a pond-field dike, a dry pond field or a boulder in a pond field (loc ref -an) using vegetation, as described above.
Epen'olda nan holo' ta mapītay ya maphod di mitanom.
They make vegetation mounds with weeds so that they will decay and the (vegetables) planted will be robust.
For someone (agent) to use weeds, grass, stubble (inst i-, paN-) for making a vegetation mound, as described above.
3
A wound ball of yarn, string, rope.
Yarn is wound into a ball from a skein, niwalangan, placed on an umbrella swift, welong.
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