English-Osage

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A

a bit (of)π’Ήπ“Žπ““π’»Ν˜unspec. comp. form ofπ’Ήπ“Žπ““π’»Ν˜
a default combination of demonstrative and positional article used for both concrete and abstract items)𐒼𐒰 π“Šπ’·unspec. comp. form ofπ’Όπ’°π“Šπ’·
a few, a small number (of a countable noun, such as people)π’Ήπ“Žπ““π’»Ν˜unspec. comp. form ofπ’Ήπ“Žπ““π’»Ν˜
a genus of birds, including the field or prairie lark, spotted sandpiper or tip-up, plover, curlew, etc.π“ˆπ’²
a kind of bison, or buffalo with reddish-yellow hair, and long legs (the other buffaloes are dark)𐓍𐓂𐓐𐒷
a little bit (of a liquid or other mass noun, such as ground coffee)π’Ήπ“Žπ““π’»Ν˜unspec. comp. form ofπ’Ήπ“Žπ““π’»Ν˜
a little bit (used with both count nouns and mass nouns)π’Ήπ’·π“„π’·π““π’»Ν˜unspec. comp. form ofπ’Ήπ’·π“„π’·π““π’»Ν˜
a particle used after verbal roots, denoting that an object has of its own accord produced such and such an effect-𐒰𐓍𐒷
a sign of past action, added to classifiers, verbs, nouns-𐓁𐒰
a sign of the masculine imperative𐓂