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!
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!
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. 🙂
jalōra
a feeling of sadness, defined as “something bad is happening or has happened in the recent past; thinking about this, I feel something bad.”
anlōra
Like anānte, when modifying a person, anlōra means that the person seems to be feeling sadness, and when modifying an object or event, it means that the object or event is inducing or can induce sadness in a person. anlōra can also be used in the clause-level modifier phrase ānen anlōra which means “sadly” or “with sadness”.
malāca
a person’s female child, a daughter of one’s cousins in the clan, any female child of the next generation in the clan. So the green circles in the diagram are the purple circle’s malāci.
jalōma
an embrace or hug.
temme jalōma;
She gave him a hug.
teteñ jalōma;
They gave each other a hug.
salōmme
the crook of one’s arm, the inside surface of one’s bent arms formed when one is holding something such as a baby.
Like satēnte, a body part that does not always exist.
salōha
one’s elbow(s).
Knuckles are sāka jalōha ‘finger’s elbows’.
anlō
white, yellow, the color of light. anlō is more likely to describe things that shine, glint, or otherwise let in or emit light. Symbolically, anlō is the color of right action and correct behavior.