Bundar: Bráhuí Laozánk
DrustírástíBráhuí laozánk ná murģun o táríx as e, o Bráhuí bolí ámbár jitáo mizáj o droşum as tixik. Eun to nivişta o jadíd droşum aŧí bház ure á moní bass, vale asi vaxt ase án laozánk kaí droşum aŧ Baloc cágiŕd aŧí sáŕí massune. Xalkí şaer teán aļ Zahíronk, Názenk, o Moda iskán laozánk Baloc cágiŕd aŧí Balocí o Bráhuí bolí teŧí vajúd tixene. Bráhuí laozánk ná geştir başx şáirí e, o nasr aŧí Bráhuí loazánk piní o demraí kattane. Gicená niviştánkCædmon is the earliest English poet whose name is known. An Anglo-Saxon herdsman attached to the double monastery of Streonæshalch (Whitby Abbey) during the abbacy of St. Hilda (657–681), he was originally ignorant of the art of song but learned to compose one night in the course of a dream. He later became a zealous monk and an accomplished and inspirational religious poet. Cædmon is one of twelve Anglo-Saxon poets identified in medieval sources, and one of only three for whom both roughly contemporary biographical information and examples of literary output have survived. His story is told to us in the Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum ("History of the English church") by St. Bede. Gicená zindlekav
Nádir Kambráńŕí (1924 - 15 Satumbar, 2006) ná aslí pin Abdul Ģafúr ass o 1924 aŧí vadí mass. Bráhuí bolí ŧí maroká púskuná şáirí ná amo sarxel Şáir átián e, aráfk şáirí soc o fikr átekin púskuno kasar as malár.Nádir Kambráńŕí o Bábú Abul Ráhmán Kurd asi daor aná şáir assur o asi vaxt aŧí şáirí ná biná e karer. dáfk şáirí o adabí tálukdárí án bedis,asi andá siásí şaúr o guşát dúí karer. Nádir Kambráńŕí ná şáirí ná pad aŧ am keí vákiaģák tafoko, dunto buniádí vaŕaŧ Nádi Kambráńŕí ná şáirí ŧí Rúmání o Işkía mazmúńk zebá assur antaeki, duniá ŧí ar asiŧ fitrí akk tixik ki o tená ust aná xuást o xuáindárí tá rid aŧ zind e ter ke.
Laozánk cáindáríTone is the use of pitch in language to distinguish words. All languages use intonation to express emphasis, contrast, emotion, or other such nuances, but not every language uses tone to distinguish lexical meaning. When this occurs, tones are phonemes (discrete speech sounds), just like consonants and vowels, and they are occasionally referred to as tonemes. A slight majority of the languages in the world are tonal. However, most Indo-European languages, which include the majority of the most widely-spoken languages in the world today, are not tonal. The way in which tone is used in a particular language leads to the language being classified either as a tonal language or a pitch accented language. Baŕáhí itting xuása?
Gicená foŧúGicená şaer
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