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π““π“Žπ“Šπ’·π““π“ŽΜ‹π“Šπ’·πŸ”Š1redadjective2scarletadjective3vermilionadjective4the red (ceremonial ritual term)nounπ““π“Žπ““π“Žπ’·
π““π“Žπ“Šπ’· π’·π’Όπ“‚Ν˜π““π“ŽΜπ“Šπ’· π’·Μπ’Όπ“‚Ν˜adjective1pinkish
π““π“Žπ“Šπ’· 𐓄𐒰𐓒𐓂 π’·π’Όπ“‚Ν˜π““π“ŽΜπ“Šπ’· 𐓄𐒰𐓒𐓂́ π’·Μπ’Όπ“‚Ν˜adjective1bright red2scarlet, as in red blanketsπ““π“Žπ“Šπ’· π“„π’°π“’π“Ž π’·π’Όπ“ŽΝ˜π““π“Žπ“Šπ’·π“„π’°π“’π“‚π’·π’Όπ“‚Ν˜π“„π’°π“’π“‚ π’·π’Όπ“‚Ν˜
π““π“Žπ““π“Žπ“Šπ’·π““π“ŽΜπ““π“Žπ“Šπ’·adjective1red here and there, in spots or stripesπ““π“Žπ“Šπ’·This term uses reduplication which means part of the word (usually just one syllable) is repeated to express the idea of an action or idea occurring over and over. If the syllable being reduplicated ends in "e," it almost always changes to "a." For example, "-se" would become "-sasa" or "-sase."