lunes, 24 de septiembre de 2012

cherokee phrases !¡!¡!¡!


cherokee language ¡!¡!¡!¡!¡!¡!¡!¡!¡!¡!¡!¡!!¡!¡!¡!

English ᏣᎳᎩ / Tsalagi (Cherokee)
Welcome ᎤᎵᎮᎵᏍᏗ (Ulihelisdi)
Hello ᎣᏏᏲ (Osiyo) 'ᏏᏲ (Siyo) - inf
How are you?
Fine thanks, and you?
ᏙᎯᏧ? (Dohitsu?)
ᎣᏍᏓ, ᏩᏙ. ᎠᎴ ᏂᎯ? (Osda, wado. Ale nihi) >1p
Long time no see
What's your name?
My name is ...
ᎦᏙ ᏕᏣᏙᎠ? (Gado, detsadoa)
... ᏓᏆᏙ (dagwado)
Where are you from?
I'm from ...
ᎭᏢᏖᎬᎢ? (Hatlvtegvi)
... ᏗᎨᎬ. (Digegv)
Pleased to meet you ᎦᎵᎡᎵ ᏥᏕᎾᎸ (Galiheli tsidenalv)
Good morning ᎣᏍᏓᏑᎾᎴᎢ (Osdasunalei)
Good afternoon
Good evening ᎣᏍᏓᏑᎮᏰᎡ (Osdasuheyee)
Good night ᎣᏍᏓᏑᏃᎡ (Osdasunoe)
Goodbye ᏙᎾᏓᎬᎰᎢ (Donadagvhoi) >1p
ᏙᏓᏓᎪᎲᎢ (Dodadagohvi) >pl
Good luck
Cheers/Good health!
Have a nice day
Bon appetit
Bon voyage
I understand ᎪᎵᎦ (goliga)
I don't understand ᏝᎢᎪᎵᎦ (Tlaigoliga)
I don't know ᎨᏍᏗᎦᏔ (gesdigata) inf
ᎨᏍᏗᏱᏥᎦᏔ (gesdiyitsigata) frm
Please speak more slowly
Please say that again
Please write it down
Do you speak English?
Do you speak Cherokee?
Yes, a little
ᏣᎳᎩᏍ ᎯᏬᏂᏍᎩ? (Tsalagis hiwonisgi) >1p
ᎥᎥ, ᎢᎦᏛ. (v'v, igadv)
How do you say ... in Cherokee?
Excuse me
How much is this?
Sorry
Please ᎰᏩᏧ (howatsu)
Thank you
Response
ᏩᏙ (Wado)
ᎬᎵᎡᎵᎦ (gvlieliga)
Where's the toilet?
This gentleman/lady
will pay for everything

Would you like to
dance with me?

I miss you
I love you ᎬᎨᏳᎢ (Gvgeyu'i)
Get well soon
Go away!
Leave me alone! ᏪᎾ (we na)

cherokees alphabet !!!!!!

lunes, 10 de septiembre de 2012

Dictation #1

1. Last summer we visited a sheep farm in Quetzaltenango.
The farm house had lots of romes for guest, but we diren't sleep there. In the garden there was a small campsite so we stay there in a tent. The front door was just a hole.


jueves, 6 de septiembre de 2012

how hurricanes are form?

hurricanes !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Hurricanes begin as tropical storms over the warm moist waters of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans near the equator. (Near the Phillippines and the China Sea, hurricanes are called typhoons.) As the moisture evaporates it rises until enormous amounts of heated moist air are twisted high in the atmosphere. The winds begin to circle counterclockwise north of the equator or clockwise south of the equator. The reatively peaceful center of the hurricane is called the eye. Around this center winds move at speeds between 74 and 200 miles per hour. As long as the hurricane remains over waters of 79F or warmer, it continues to pull moisture from the surface and grow in size and force. When a hurricane crosses land or cooler waters, it loses its source of power, and its wind gradually slow until they are no longer of hurricane force--less than 74 miles per hour.