gulibaa buruma dha.gurramay _ three dogs dancing
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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if i look back, i am lost
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gulibaa buruma dha.gurramay _ three dogs dancing

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Wugawa nhama dhurra-laa-nha.
Flood is rising.
yira
tooth
#Gamilaraay
2018 inktober, day 8 to day 12
dhayn are people in Gamilaraay

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âNew Zealandâs government wants the Maori language to be taught in all primary schools alongside maths and science, with the prime minister saying she wants to be one of the last generation that wasnât taught. While te reo Maori is one of three languages officially recognised in New Zealand - alongside English and New Zealand Sign Language - itâs currently not compulsory and not taught at many schools. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern - who wants to raise her daughter, Neve, speaking both Maori and English - told reporters the language was âpart of who we are as a countryâ. âI have an aspiration that my generation will be last generation to regret not having the chance to learn te reo Maori in our learning and education journey,â she said. âI am still, if itâs not obvious, at the beginning of my journey to learn te reo Maori.â Government ministers have avoided using the word âcompulsoryâ - which has proved controversial in the past - in favour of âuniversal availabilityâ. While the use of words and phrases in Maori is now common in New Zealand, 2013 census figures suggested as few 50,000 people spoke it at a high level, while about 150,000 were conversational. Thereâs also been a recent surge in interest in beginner Maori courses across the country, with providers saying they had to leave hundreds of people on waiting lists this year.â
â NZ government pushes for Maori language in all schools by 2025
What about Australia, We have few languages people can learn on every level, start teaching
me: i am so stupid⌠genuinely illiterate. i am the dumbest bitch alive
someone: youâre stupid
me: Einstein Wants What I Have
All over the country all but 20 of the 250 Indigenous languages are highly endangered, but now they are finding a new voice.
gawuga - head
ngaay - mouth gumay - lips ngayaga-li - to kiss

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Gabi is coffee in Gamilaraay
Masculine words ending in -a
If you have already plunged into the Spanish grammar, even a little, you may have noted that most of the words ending in -a are feminine, like la casa (the house). However, the true is that many words that end in -a are masculine. This is a small list about some of them.
1) Words with a greek origin ending in -ma:
el problema: problem
el tema: subject, issue
el idioma: langauge
el sistema: system
el enigma: puzzle, enigma
el dilema: dilemma, problem
el fantasma: ghost
el diploma: diploma
el poema: poem
el programa: program
el drama: drama
el teorema: theorem
2) Professions and jobs of men (some of them ending in -ta have also a greek origin):
el poeta: the poet
el atleta: the athlete
el florista: the florist
el guĂa: the guide
el centinela: the guard, sentinel
el espĂa: the spy
el cura: the priest
el papa: the pope
3) Names of languages
el quechua: the Quechua language
el maya: the Maya language
el celta: the Celt language
el persa: the Persian language
4) Names of the colors (not acting like adjectives)
el rosa: the pink color
el violeta: the violet color
el naranja: the orange color
el pĂşrpura: the purple color
5) Others
el dĂa: day
el mapa: map
el planeta: planet
Itâs important noting that if you change the gender and the article of some of this words, you will end up with a complete different meaning. For instance:
la curameans the cure, the healing, but el curamenas the priest
el rosa refers to the color pink, but la rosa is the flower, the rose.
However, regarding the profession and jobs (2), many of them are used to both men and women professions. You just have to change the article:
el atleta(the male athlete), la atleta(the female athlete)
EspaĂąol
I started Hebrew, which is why Iâve been dead on this blog, but I donât think I can ever properly convey to you guys the sheer cultural whiplash of spending years learning Japanese from Japanese teachers and then trying to learn Hebrew from an Israeli
Japanese: you walk into class already apologizing for being alive Hebrew: you walk into class, the teacher insults you and you are expected to insult her back
Japanese: conjugates every single verb based on degree of intended politeness, nevermind keigo and honorifics Hebrew: Someone asked my teacher how to say âexcuse meâ and she laughed for several seconds before saying we shouldnât worry about remembering that since weâll never need to say it
Japanese: if you get one stroke wrong the entire kanji is incomprehensible Hebrew: cursive? script? fuck it do whatever you want, you donât even have to write the vowels out unless you feel like it
Japanese: the closest thing there is to âbastardâ is an excessively direct âyouâ pronoun Hebrew: âbitchâ translates directly
Manduwii are shoes
Miyay means girl

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Gamilaraay is an Aboriginal endangered language that is now being used in classrooms and spoken in communities more than it was 20 years ago.
Gamilaraay is an Aboriginal endangered language that is now being used in classrooms and spoken in communities more than it was 20 years ago.
Restoring prestige to endangered languages!!!!
man.garr biibabiiba means paperbag