Reverse Concordance of Example Sentences
unified alphabetization
-A -B -C -D -E -F -G -H -I -J -K -L -M -N -O -P -R -S -T -U -V -X -Y |
| 1. | Earaerōkeañḷọktataraaneotiṃaeoekareọtōk. | The northward flow of the current was the strongest the day the ship went aground. | aerōkeañḷọk |
| 2. | EjarlepjujareoraaruweilotiṃaeoñanJepaan. | There were a multitude of people who went on the ship to Japan. | jarlepju |
| 3. | Ejjeḷọkwōtḷapineṇtiṃa. | That ship is outstandingly large. | ḷap |
| 4. | Ejjoḷọkwōttiṃaeṇjānṃokta | The ship is rustier than before. | kajjo |
| 5. | Ekabwilōñlōñwōttiṃakōnankilep. | The size of the ship is amazing. | kabwilōñlōñ |
| 6. | Eḷapankabwilōñlōñtiṃaeṇearpotok. | Everyone is amazed by that ship that arrived. | kabwilōñlōñ |
| 7. | Emaroketiṃaeoṇailikinnememijakkapeneoinṃwearkōnkeewōdwōdelowaantoeo. | The ship was benighted at the ocean-side of the atoll and the captain was afraid to enter the lagoon for fear of running aground on any of the coral heads littering the channel. | marok |
| 8. | Eṃōjaerbaaṃetiṃa eo | They bombed the ship. | baaṃ |
| 9. | Eṃweeaartiṃa eo | The ship has entered the lagoon. | ṃweeaar |
| 10. | Ewōrjiluantiṃaeṇinjinea.Aolepri-injineareinjiluraardiojḷọkjānjikuuḷinjinea. | The ships has three engineers. All three of them have graduated from mechanical engineering school. | injinia |
| 11. | Itaakintiṃaeḷḷaperupwōd. | The crash of a huge ship could break the reef. | itaak |
| 12. | Jeenintiṃabweeḷap. | It's a ship chain because it's big. | jeen |
| 13. | Jeḷarorejkañkañetiṃa eo | The sailors are chipping off rust from the ship. | kañkañ |
| 14. | Jeṃaankōṃrokaruwetokioonjuontiṃakijoñjoññan ānin.” | A long time ago the two of us rode in to this island on a huge boat.” [P299] | kijoñ |
| 15. | Joñanankilep,emaroñkarektaketiṃakorōkōnrauntokñanaelōñkoiloiienNavyko. | It was so large that it could have hauled the ships that used to do field trips around the islands during Navy times. [P1151] | tiṃa |
| 16. | Ḷooneoearliboororetiṃa eo | The launch chased the ship. | libooror |
| 17. | MeneoejjeḷọkdeeowaanektakiḷọkmenkeinñanLikiep,ijellọkinwōttiṃainrauneo,akkōnkekōmmānaikujnaajkarkōttartokbarjiluallōñ. | The only thing they lacked was a vehicle to haul these things to Likiep, except for the fieldtrip ship, but we would have had to wait for that for three months. [P19] | de |
| 18. | Raarjeenetiṃa eo | They chained the ship to the dock. | jeen |
| 19. | Tiṃaeoearjileleanjerak. | The ship blew its horn to signal its departure. | jilel |
| 20. | Tiṃaeoearpotokjibboñōninneeoḷọkjuon. | The ship arrived three mornings ago. | jibboñōn inne eo ḷọk juon |
| 21. | Tiṃaeoeṇejkaiokḷọkāneṇ | The ship is going directly toward the island. | kaiok |
| 22. | Tiṃaeoeṇilotoeṇ. | The ship is in the pass. | eṇ |
| 23. | TiṃaeoepādeañtakinṂajōḷ | The ship is in the northern side of the Marshall Islands. | eañtak |
| 24. | TiṃakeinrōkeinañkōiarinaelōñinKuajleenālikinwōtanṃōjanri-Amedkakarbōkaelōñeṇjānri-Jepaanroilotariṇaeeokeinkaruoanlaḷin. | After the Americans took the island from the Japanese in World War II, they used to anchor these ships in the Kwajalein lagoon. [P4] | ri- |
| 25. | WainṃōṃkajkarboojineaktoektakjeḷaantiṃakowaanNavyeoanAmerica. | Before, this boat was a cargo ship, belonging to the American Navy sailors. [P3] | booj |
-A -B -C -D -E -F -G -H -I -J -K -L -M -N -O -P -R -S -T -U -V -X -Y