From aakö (“two”) + amo (“hand”) + jato (“on the other side of”), literally “two on the other side of the hand”.
aakö amojato
- seven
- Marina A. R. de Mattos Vieira, Lucas P. das N. S. Lima (2019) Castro Costa da Silva, Marcos Rodrigues, Raul Luiz Yacashi Rocha, transl., Plano de gestão territorial e ambiental Terra Indígena Yanomami […] [1] (overall work in Ye'kwana and Portuguese), Boa Vista: Hutukara Associação Yanomami (HAY) and Instituto Socioambiental (ISA), page 3
- Ye’kwana nonoodö: yawaadeejudinnha wenhä = Território Ye’kwana: a vida em Auaris[2] (overall work in Ye'kwana and Portuguese), São Paulo: ISA – Instituto Socioambiental, 2017, →ISBN, →OCLC, pages 62, 67: “aakä amääjato”
- Hall, Katherine (2007) “āʔkə amohaʔto”, in Mary Ritchie Key & Bernard Comrie, editors, The Intercontinental Dictionary Series[3], Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, published 2021