bwa
Anguthimri
Verb
bwa
- (transitive, Mpakwithi) to break
References
- Terry Crowley, The Mpakwithi dialect of Anguthimri (1981), page 185
Babanki
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bwàː/
Interjection
bwa
- the sound of farting
Synonyms
Further reading
- Pius W. Akumbu, Kejom (Babanki) Ideophones (2016)
Haitian Creole
Etymology
Inherited from French bois, from Middle French boys, from Old French bois, from Early Medieval Latin boscus, borrowed from Frankish *busk, from Proto-Germanic *buskaz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bwa/
Noun
bwa
Derived terms
- bwa nèf
- bwa ron
- gwo bwa
Kituba
Verb
bwa
- to fall
Louisiana Creole
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Inherited from Louisiana French boire (“to drink”).
Alternative forms
Verb
bwa (past bwá)
- (one-stem, ambitransitive) to drink
- Mo bwa. ― I drink.
- Mo bwá. ― I drank. / I drunk.
- 1998, Albert Valdman, Thomas A. Klingler, Margaret M. Marshall, Kevin J. Rottet, Dictionary of Louisiana Creole, page 90:
- Dan tan-sa-la, ye te pa gen de RUNNING[sic] dolo. To te gen mèt en BRIDLE onn vyeu chwal-la e kouri kote la rivyè, fe li bwa. [Dan tem-çála, yé té pa gin de running dolo. To té gin mèt in bridle onn vye shwal-la é kouri koté larivyè, fé li bwa.]
- In those days they didn't have running water. You had to put a bridle on the horse and take it to the river and make it drink.
Related terms
Etymology 2
Inherited from Louisiana French bois (“wood; etc.”).
Noun
bwa
- alternative form of dibwa (“wood(s); stick; tree; stalk”)
- 1998, Albert Valdman, Thomas A. Klingler, Margaret M. Marshall, Kevin J. Rottet, Dictionary of Louisiana Creole, page 90:
- Mo sòrti [sòrtí] dan fon bwa.
- I came out from the deep woods.
Venda
Verb
bwa
- to dig
Welsh
Etymology
From Middle Welsh bwa, from Middle English bowe, from Old English boga.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbuː.a/
Noun
bwa m (plural bwâu)
Derived terms
- Bwa'r Gwynt (“the Milky Way”)
- bwa'r arch, bwa'r Drindod, bwa'r glaw, bwa'r hin, bwa'r wrach, bwa'r wybren (“rainbow”)