different between yumi vs tumi

yumi

English

Etymology

From Japanese ? (yumi)

Noun

yumi (plural yumis or yumi)

  1. A type of archery bow from Japan.

Anagrams

  • Miyu

Achuar

Noun

yumi

  1. celestial water : water from the sky, i.e. rainwater, or — under certain circumstances — water from a river which is used in making manioc beer
  2. a gourd used for gathering river-water to use to make manioc beer

See also

  • entza (water from the earth, e.g. from a river)

References

  • Philippe Descola, In the Society of Nature: A Native Ecology in Amazonia (1996, ?ISBN, page 36: "Like other Amazonian groups, the Achuar make a clear lexical distinction between celestial water, yumi, and terrestrial water, entza (Levi-Strauss 1964: 195). Yumi designates the rainwater [] . Entza is both water from the river and the river itself; it is the clear water of fast-flowing streams, the brown boiling flood waters, the slack, low waters of the river, and the stagnant waters of the swamps. By some curious paradox, the Achuar use yumi to designate the cooking water used in making manioc beer and for boiling the tubers; and yet they fetch this celestial water from the river in a gourd they also call yumi."

Aguaruna

Noun

yumi

  1. water

References

  • Languages of the Amazon (2012, ?ISBN

Bislama

Etymology

From yu +? mi.

Pronoun

yumi

  1. first person multiple plural inclusive pronoun; you, more than one else and I

Synonyms

  • yumitupela

See also

  • mipela
  • mitripela
  • mitupela
  • yumipela
  • yumitripela
  • yumitupela

French

Noun

yumi m (plural yumis)

  1. yumi (Japanese longbow)

Japanese

Romanization

yumi

  1. R?maji transcription of ??

Pijin

Pronoun

yumi

  1. Alternative form of iumi

Tagalog

Noun

yumì

  1. refined manners or modest behavior (especially of a young woman)
  2. softness or tenderness to the touch (of texture)

Synonyms

  • (refined manners): hinhin

Tok Pisin

Etymology

yu + mi

Pronoun

yumi

  1. the first person inclusive: the speaker and the person(s) being spoken to: you and I, you and me, we two, us two, we

See also


Torres Strait Creole

Etymology

yu + mi

Pronoun

yumi

  1. the first person dual inclusive: the speaker and the person being spoken to: you and I, you and me, we two, us two, we

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tumi

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Quechua tumi.

Noun

tumi (plural tumis)

  1. (archaeology) A ceremonial axe used by some Incan and pre-Incan cultures of South America.
    • 1979, Alberto Rex González, Pre-Columbian Metallurgy in Northwest Argentina: Historical Development and Cultural Process, Elizabeth P. Benson (editor), Pre-Columbian Metallurgy of South America, Conference Proceedings, page 177,
      The tumis are characterized by a metal handle, which can be bent at the free end or may have an ornament in the form of a button or a zoomorphic head; they also have a curved, sharp blade edge, forming a semicircle or half-moon. [] The archaeological associations of the tumis found in Argentina indicate that these objects all had an Inca origin.
    • 2002, Thomas B. F. Cummins, Toasts with the Inca: Andean Abstraction and Colonial Images on Quero Vessels, page 18,
      For instance, he makes sure that the reader is aware that the weapons taken by the Inca army, tumis, are ritual weapons used for the ritual hunt and slaughter of llamas.
    • 2004, Richard L. Burger, Lucy C. Salazar, Catalogue, Richard L. Burger, Lucy C. Salazar (editors), Machu Picchu: Unveiling the Mystery of the Incas, page 193,
      Decorated tumis such as this one may have been used for ceremonial purposes, although their utilization on more mundane occasions should not be ruled out.

Anagrams

  • muti

Quechua

Pronunciation

  • (Cusco) IPA(key): /?tu.mi/

Noun

tumi

  1. (historical) tumi (a ceremonial golden axe used by the pre-Columbian peoples of Peru)
  2. scalpel (small knife used in surgical procedures)
  3. (neologism) a small instrument used by bakers to scrape and collect flour

Declension

Synonyms

  • (scalpel): sirk'ana
  • (instrument used by bakers): k'isuna

Derived terms

  • tumiy

References

  • “tumi” in Academia Mayor de la Lengua Quechua (2006) Diccionario quechua-español-quechua, 2nd edition, Cusco: Edmundo Pantigozo.

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