baxů (02_Asaxi Verbs_Root (List))
baxů
baxů
Transitivity / Valency
monotransitive — the helped party is the direct object: To ko wo zèbaxů. (“She helped me.“)
Lexical Aspect
- Durative (Activity) — unfolds over time.
- Aspect markers: na- “do repeatedly” · tå- “do once” · ni- “begin to” · chå- “do fully”.
Grammatical Note
- Root-verb compound (
ba-+xů); the final ů belongs to the root xů, not the Universal Verbalizer (a root may still take-ůto durativize).
Semantic Field
Pronunciation
IPA: /baɦuw/
Translations
- English: to help, to assist, to aid
- Polish: pomagać
Example sentence
Ăjo! Baxůkă! “Hey! Help, please!”
Alternative Forms
Null
Etymology
ba- (beside, ba- (particle)) + xů (to do, handle) — “to do-beside someone”. Same formative logic as bashá (friend, “beside-person”).
Synonyms
- bashá (related: friend, the one beside you)
Antonyms
- fdåmë (to withhold — refusing one’s aid)
Derived terms
- baxůshá (helper, ally) (potential)
Requesting Help — baxůkă, never baxůhè
The everyday request is always solicitative:
Baxůkă! — “Help, please!”
The imperative baxůhè exists but carries a rare, marked nuance: “you must help me” — an assertion of dominance over the one being asked. Cultural logic: the one who asks for help is situationally weaker than the one asked, and Asaxi expects the grammar to display this. Using hè here reads as desperation past all politeness, or as arrogance. (See 64_Conversational Repair & Exchange, 36_Polite Requests.)