ᦀᦱᧃᧈʔaan²5001verb (transitive)to readᦀᦱᧃᧈ ᦠᦹᧉ ᦑᦱᧃᧈ ᦝᧂ.She read it to him.3.5.7.3Read2verb (transitive)to countᦅᦳᧃ ᦀᦱᧃᧈ ᦖᦹᧃᧈ ᦀᦱᧃᧈ ᦶᦉᧃ ᦃᧁᧉ ᦺᦔ ᦶᦕᧁ ᦷᦉᧃ ᦷᦜᧂ ᦁᦳᧃ ᦍᦱᧃ.People counted in the ten-thousands came to the park.8.1.2Countᦀᦱᧃᧈᦵᦉᧂᦀᦱᧃᧈᦷᦎᦀᦱᧃᧈᦑᦸᧂᦰᦀᦱᧃᧈᦓᧇ
ᦀᦱᧃᧈᦷᦎʔaan²too¹verb (intransitive)to readᦂᦱᧂ ᦆᦹᧃ ᦎᦲᦰ ᦀᦱᧃᧈ ᦷᦎ ᦈᦲᧂᧈ ᦓᦸᧃ.At night he would read and then he would go to sleep.3.5.7.3Readᦀᦱᧃᧈᦷᦎ
ᦀᦱᧃᧈᦑᦸᧂᦰʔaan²tɔŋ⁴verb (transitive)to read (can be separated)ᦙᧃ ᦀᦱᧃᧈ ᦑᦸᧂᦰ ᦂᦱᧃᧉ ᦺᦔ ᦋᦴᧈ ᦃᦸᧉ.He read every point in the document.ᦷᦂᧆ ᦶᦎᧄᧉ ᦀᦸᧅᧈ ᦙᦱ ᦵᦗᦲᧃᧈ ᦠᦳᧄ ᦀᦱᧃᧈ ᦠᦳᧄ ᦑᦸᧂᦰ?How do you write things that people will want to read?3.5.7.3Readᦀᦱᧃᧈᦑᦸᧂᦰ
ᦟᦹᧇᦵᦣᧃlɯp⁵hen⁴verb (transitive)to revise (American: review); study againᦃᦾᧉ ᦈᧅ ᦀᧁ ᦷᦎ ᦢᧁᧈ ᦣᦴᧉ ᦓᧃᧉ ᦶᦔᧂ ᦆᦱ ᦶᦕᧃᧈ, ᦟᦹᧇ ᦵᦣᧃ ᦊᦴᧈ.I will make flash cards for the characters I don't know, so I can study them again.3.5.7.3Readᦟᦹᧇᦵᦣᧃ
ᦣᦴᧉᦷᦎhuu⁶too¹verb (intransitive)to be able to read; to be literateᦑᦱᧃᧈ ᦢᧁᧈ ᦣᦴᧉ ᦷᦎ, ᦈᦲᧂᧈ ᦵᦐᧁᧈ ᦵᦗᦲᧃᧈ ᦀᦱᧃᧈ ᦠᦹᧉ ᦝᧂ.He couldn't read, so he asked somebody to read it to him.ᦡᧇ ᦈᦲᧇ ᦂᦱᧃ ᦁᧃ ᦅᦳᧃ ᦎᦱ ᦢᦸᧆᧈ ᦺᦉ ᦢᧁᧈ ᦣᦴᧉ ᦷᦎ.Eradicate illiteracy for blind people.ᦖᦴᧈ ᦢᧁᧈ ᦣᦴᧉ ᦷᦎ ᦍᧂ ᦋᦱᧂᧈ ᦃᧇ.People who are not literate are still able to sing.3.5.7.3Readᦣᦴᧉᦷᦎ