Ix̲wet is the Halq’eméylem for ‘to sweep (it)’.…
Pronunciation
- Ix̲wet sounds like EE-kwutt, but instead of a k you say the Halq’eméylem hard-x.
- To make the hard-x, create friction with the back of your tongue against your uvula.
Audio: Elizabeth Herrling, Elizabeth Phillips
Examples
Here are some examples of how you can use íx̲wet:
- Tsel íx̲wet te lhx̲éyleptel. – I swept the floor.
- Tsel íx̲wet. – I swept it.
- Li iyólem kw’as íx̲wet te lhx̲éyleptel? – Can you sweep the floor?
- Li iyólem kw’as íx̲wet? – Can you sweep it?
- Ix̲wet tsel cha te lhx̲éyleptel. – I will sweep the floor
- Ix̲wet tsel cha. – I will sweep it.
Note: in these examples there is no word for ‘it‘. With this type of verb, if you don’t specify what you’re acting on, speakers will understand ‘it‘.
‘-ing’ form
To talk about sweeping as an ongoing action ,i.e. sweeping, you use a slightly different form of the verb, like this: í:x̲wet – ‘sweeping (it)’. This form of the verb has a slightly longer vowel i, with a falling tone (audio here).
Here are some examples of how you can use the –ing form :
- I:x̲wet tsel te lhx̲éyleptel. – I am sweeping the floor.
- I:x̲wet tsel. – I am sweeping it.
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