ankēōren

ankeeooren

ankēōren

overcast, so a sheet of cloud, gray in color, covering the whole sky. One might sometimes encounter the non-standard word ankēōri for a grouping of clouds, but never jakēōr for a single cloud.

jalāra

jalaara

jalāra

a cloud, especially of the white and fluffy type. Partly cloudy might be called ānen anlāri using the collective form for a group of clouds.

jālre

jaalre

jālre

a storm, with wind, rain, thunder, or lightning. A big storm might be referred to in the collective anālri in recognition of all the different parts and events that occur during a storm.

anrōli

anrooli

anrōli

snow, frozen precipitation. Also snow on the ground, an expanse of snow. There is a separate word for “frost”, but otherwise any snow on the ground qualifies as anrōli.

jatāna

jataana

jatāna

a stream or river with a faster flow of water than jarēña, fast enough generally that it is not considered navigable. If a flow of water has portions that are navigable and not navigable, then they are referred to by different names (even if the names are jarēña Sīwa and jatāna Sīwa for what we might call river Sīwa.)

jēwār

jeewaar

jēwār

a lake. So, completely inland, not part of the sea, forming at the bottom of a basin of some sort, and generally large enough to float a boat or otherwise be a significant feature in the landscape.

sū jēwāri āñ la jamāonre;
Among the lakes was a city.