jalōþen

jaloothen

jalōþen

a sudden bad feeling in reaction to something unusual and unexpected, so shocked, appalled, horrified.

sele jalōþen ien āl sele jekīþa ien ñi jajēri jahīji þō lā;
I am shocked to now know that games of chance are happening here!

jacēxa

jaceexa

jacēxa

a feeling of immediate hope for the unknown future. So, the person who feels jacēxa thinks that something good and wanted is going to happen in the near future, but this is uncertain. This makes this the opposite of jamīra.

Friday Cat Pic

P5270001

This is Foxybutt. When I say that I have 2 and a half cats, he’s the half. He’s mostly stray, but comes around occasionally to complain about life and snag some food.

And I really need to clean up my back yard.

jamīra

jamiira

jamīra

a feeling of immediate dread or fear of the unknown future. So, the person who feels jamīra thinks that something bad and unwanted is going to happen in the near future, but this is uncertain. This differs from jalūta in that it is a stronger feeling and the thing feared or dreaded is less certain. So, one feels jalūta with regards to a known event (it’s happened before), and jamīra with regards to an unknown event.

jalūta

jaluuta

jalūta

a feeling of not looking forward to a known event, un-anticipation, fear, dread. Probably more likely experienced in response to an upcoming dental appointment than a trip to the market. 🙂

jakewīren

jakewiiren

jakewīren

the feeling one gets when one has had something added to one’s responsibilities; this can be a good feeling when one wants those responsibilities, or a bad feeling, when one is feeling burdened or overwhelmed. Sometimes jakewīren means both simultaneously – so the pride one has in one’s responsibilities plus the feeling of having too much to do, or stressed by one’s workload while also feeling good about how much one can handle.

sele jakewīren to [the length of my to-do list].

janāntolme

janaantolme

janāntolme

a good feeling from thinking about something that has changed (from a bad situation) due to an action or that has been prevented from happening due to an action; or, how I feel after I’ve crossed something off my to-do list. 🙂

So, a sense of relief and accomplishment. In some ways this is paired with janūra, which includes a need to respond to something bad that has happened. janāntolme is a feeling of accomplishment after one has responded to something. In that sense, it may also be used to mean the relief one feels after the act of forgiveness.

ansāknenūren

ansaaknenuuren

ansāknenūren

used to describe someone who is either continuously angry and might someday “explode” into action, or who gets angry over and over again. This word is related to the word jasāka ‘volcano’.

janūra

januura

janūra

a bad feeling that occurs when thinking of something unwanted that has happened and thinking that one needs to do something because of this, in other words, anger, or at least the core of it.

tō tele janūra to makīþa matēnnā jerrasōr tō tūaþ ñalla ja rā anālhāri mē ānen antāken;
The reply of the talking rock made me angry so I moved it into the ocean with force.

In other words, the talking rock’s reply was unwanted and made me want to do something in response.