Thursday, 4 February 2021

2021 Day 35

2021 Dedh Pemdhek warn Ügens

De Yow, pajwora mis Whevrel

Thursday, 4th February







De, my a drouvyas pictour teg a bescader an metêrn. Ew hedna agan edhen an tecka? Pe edhen ew an gwelha e'n norves? My a whilas ha cavos nebes edhen leun a liw. Nag üjy anjei en pow ma. Ma radn anodhans en Africa, Sooth America hag Asia, en ayredhow trovadnüs. Eus othom dhodhans a wil lies liw? Nebes colorys ew kemegyl. Mowns ow talla gen liwans en plansow debrys gans an edhyn - pecar'a kemyk nei a wel en caretys. Anjei ell treylya melyn dhe rüdh po rüdhvelyn. Dû ha melyn ell bos kemyk deffrans - pecar'a liw et agan crohen ha blew. Ha purpur ew nebes aral. Liwyow erel ew serneth. Ma molecûlys ha pocketys a ayr e'n plüv ow refractya gòlow, ha nei a wel blou po liwyow ow treylya. 






Yesterday, I found a lovely picture of a kingfisher. Is that our most beautiful bird? Which is the best bird in the world? I searched and found several colourful birds. They are not in this country. Some of them are in Africa, South America and Asia, in tropical climates. Do they need to make lots of colours? Some colours are chemical. They start with colouration in plants eaten by the birds - like a chemical we see in carrots. They can change yellow to red or orange. Black and yellow can be a different chemical - like the colour in our skin and hair. And purple is something else. Other colours are structural. Molecules or air pockets in the feathers refract light, and we see blue or changing colours.









Deg ger rag hedhyw: Ten words for today

an tecka the most beautiful < teg

ayredhow climates

blew hair

caretys carrots < caretesen (f)

crohen (f) skin

kemegyl (adjective) chemical

kemyk (m) chemical

liwans (m) colouration

norves (m) world

serneth structural

trovadnüs tropical








 

 










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