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kwíyx̲t

Illustration for 'to move (it)'

Kwíyx̲t means to move (it). You use it to talk about moving another object or another person (not yourself).


Pronunciation

  • Kwíyx̲t sounds like KWEEKT, except that instead of a K the second sound is the hard-x (̲x).
  • To make the hard-x, you create heavy friction with the back of your tongue against your uvula.


Audio: Elizabeth Phillips


-ing form

Kwíyx̲t has a special ing (‘continuative’ or ongoing action) form, like this: kwáyx̲tmoving (it) (audio here).

Elders make this type of –ing form by a vowel change.


Related words

Here are some other words that come from the same root as kwíyx̲t:

  • kwíyx̲thetto move (it)
  • skwóyx̲theta movement, a doing
  • kwíythesemto shake one’s head

The -t ending marks ‘transitive’ verbs (verbs where one person or thing acts on another person or thing).

The suffix marks a kind of ‘distributed’ action.


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