From:Nancy Thomas To:nlthomas@YvwiiUsdinvnohii.net Subject:CWY #68 Come In Lesson Date:Thu, 22 Feb 2001 11:40:45 -0800 X-Priority:3 Status:R Received: from default (d47.as1.alpe.mi.voyager.net [216.93.53.240]) by YvwiiUsdinvnohii.net (8.9.3) with SMTP id LAA18124 sender nlthomas@YvwiiUsdinvnohii.net for ; Thu, 22 Feb 2001 11:40:45 -0800 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: Becky! ver 1.23 X-UIDL: 75d6d7ae846f813cddecf9b413966ee3 X-Becky-Encoding:2 Cherokee language lessons Home Page: Archive: Message #68 Date: Dec 06 2000 14:35:08 EST >From: "Cherokee language lessons" Subject: CWY #68 Come In Lesson -- Come In Lesson Today we are going to learn several phrases that will be helpful if you have someone knocking at your door. Come in Ki-ya-ha-ga Come in the house. Ga-li-tso-de Formal Ga-l-tso-de Conversational Note: You will hear this term often in the Gi-du-wa dialect and it really means house. But the implication is to come into the house. Once you your visitor has entered the house you can ask him to sit down. Sit down Ha-hv-ga Note: You will use this more as a command statement and it carries more of a formal context. Sit down or have a seat. Tso-hle-s-di Note: Tso-hle-s-di actually means chair, but it can also be implied like the English phrase," Take a seat". Word of the Day December V-s-gi-yi Formal V-s-gi-y Conversational *For new members-If you have just started receiving lessons you can go to http://www.listbot.com, click List Subscribers and enter your member information, click (View List Archives), click (Cherokee Language Lessons) and choose the back lesson that you need. .