maika
See also: Maika
English
editNoun
editmaika (plural maikas)
- (India) A woman's maternal village: the place where she grew up, especially as contrasted with her new home after marriage.
- 1977, Kenneth David, editor, The New Wind: Changing Identities in South Asia, page 279:
- A woman typically reports feeling much better after visiting her maika, and it is sometimes thought that the health of her children is improved by their visiting their mother's brother's house.
- 1996, Joyce Burkhalter Flueckiger, Gender and Genre in the Folklore of Middle India, page 86:
- These images reflect a married woman's fond, idealized recollections of her maikā, where she was relatively free and pampered and which she perceives as a land of (emotional) wealth and prosperity.
- 1997, Kiran Nagarkar, Cuckold, HarperCollins, published 2013, page 72:
- This was the last indulgence she was permitted. It was meant to soften the severing of all connections with her maika.
Anagrams
editChinook Jargon
editAlternative forms
editPronoun
editmaika
Malagasy
editAdjective
editmaika
- in a hurry
Maori
editEtymology
editRelated to Tahitian me'a and Hawaiian maiʻa from Proto-Polynesian *maika.[1][2]
Noun
editmaika
References
edit- ^ “Maika”, in Te Māra Reo, Benson Family Trust, 2023
- ^ Biggs, Bruce (1991) “A Linguist Revisits the New Zealand Bush”, in Pawley, A, editor, Man and a half: essays in Pacific anthropology and ethnobiology in honour of Ralph Bulmer[1], Auckland: Polynesian Society, archived from the original on 3 February 2019, pages 67-72
Murui Huitoto
editmaika | |
---|---|
Root | Classifier |
maika- | — |
Etymology
editCognate with Minica Huitoto maika and Nüpode Huitoto maika.
Pronunciation
editNoun
editmaika
Declension
editDeclension of maika
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
Absolutive | maika | maikaɨaɨ |
Nominative | maikadɨ | maikaɨaɨdɨ |
Accusative | maikana | maikaɨaɨna |
Dative/Locative | maikamo | maikaɨaɨmo |
Ablative | maikamona | maikaɨaɨmona |
Instrumental | maikado | maikaɨaɨdo |
Causal | maikari | maikaɨaɨri |
Privative | maikanino | maikaɨaɨnino |
Root
editmaika
Derived terms
editReferences
edit- Shirley Burtch (1983) Diccionario Huitoto Murui (Tomo I) (Linguistica Peruana No. 20)[2] (in Spanish), Yarinacocha, Peru: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano, page 171
- Katarzyna Izabela Wojtylak (2017) A grammar of Murui (Bue): a Witotoan language of Northwest Amazonia.[3], Townsville: James Cook University press (PhD thesis), page 120
Categories:
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- Indian English
- English terms with quotations
- Chinook Jargon lemmas
- Chinook Jargon pronouns
- Malagasy lemmas
- Malagasy adjectives
- Maori terms derived from Proto-Polynesian
- Maori lemmas
- Maori nouns
- mi:Fruits
- Murui Huitoto terms with IPA pronunciation
- Murui Huitoto lemmas
- Murui Huitoto nouns
- Murui Huitoto roots
- huu:Spurges