On Thu, 11 Jul 2019 19:17:10 +0300 "mayqel qunen'oS" <mihkoun@gmail.com> wrote:
The verb {qeq} is given as "practice, train, prepare".
If I say {moQbara' vIqeq}, then what does it mean ?
"I practice mok'bara" as in "I practice karate" (that is "I know how it's done") ?
"I practice mok'bara" as in "I'm training so that I'll become better" ?
"I train mok'bara" as in "I grabbed the mok'bara and I caused it to train" ?
"I prepare mok'bara" as in "I grabbed the mok'bara and I'm getting it ready for something" ?
~ jkkhjhj
You seem to be looking at each word in the definition as separate options. When you see definitions with multiple words like this, try to feel for a single meaning that is described by all those words together. You should be able to replace any of those words into your sentences. If it doesn't work, you probably have the wrong meaning. I see this happen a lot. People pick just one word out of the definition. When MO uses multiple words, it is to help narrow down what meaning he is intending. - DloraH