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Lesson 1

(1) The document introduces a language lesson that provides translations and pronunciations for common phrases involving living: "I live" translates to "nayka miɬayt", "you live" translates to "mayka miɬayt", and "people live" translates to "tilxam ɬaska miɬayt". (2) It includes notes on pronunciation of certain letters and sounds in the language. (3) Key vocabulary words are defined, such as "nayka" meaning "I" and "miɬayt" meaning "to live, be somewhere, have, there is".

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
58 views

Lesson 1

(1) The document introduces a language lesson that provides translations and pronunciations for common phrases involving living: "I live" translates to "nayka miɬayt", "you live" translates to "mayka miɬayt", and "people live" translates to "tilxam ɬaska miɬayt". (2) It includes notes on pronunciation of certain letters and sounds in the language. (3) Key vocabulary words are defined, such as "nayka" meaning "I" and "miɬayt" meaning "to live, be somewhere, have, there is".

Uploaded by

lezlie_2k2
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Lesson 1

(1) you live (1) mayka miɬayt


(2) I live (2) nayka miɬayt
(3) people live (3) tilxam ɬaska miɬayt
(4) this is good (4) ɬush ukuk

E1
translate the following
(1) I live
(2) you live
(3) people live

Pronunciation

ay English I in "fine"
aw English ow in "cow"
ɬ English l in "land" pronounced without voice
x Scottish ch in "loch"

Vocabulary

1. nayka : I, means you (singular)


2. miɬayt : to live, be somewhere, have, there is.
3. tilxam : people
4. ɬaska: they

Grammar

For non-pronoun words like tilxam the appropriate pronoun is needed before the verb

e.g. tilxam ɬaska miɬayt

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