Bźatga/test
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| 1 | The sun shines | Saułazda laśrade |
| 2 | The sun is shining | Saułzda bide e 'ja laśrane |
| 3 | The sun shone | Saułzda laśrase |
| 4 | The sun will shine | Saułzda laśrade |
| 5 | The sun has been shining | |
| 6 | The sun is shining again | Saułzda laśrade edvoću |
| 7 | The sun will shine tomorrow | Saułzda laśrade abreja |
| 8 | The sun shines brightly | Saułzda laśrade peurazdu |
| 9 | The bright sun shines | Saułzda peura laśrade |
| 10 | The sun is rising now | Saułzda rede na |
| 11 | All the people shouted | Oĺiẑi dońi garse |
| 12 | Some of the people shouted | Źiẑi dońi garse |
| 13 | Many of the people shouted twice | Lauŕiẑi dońi garse daveću |
| 14 | Happy people often shout | Mencezdu dońi lauńi garde |
| 15 | The kitten jumped up | Coleńa legse |
| 16 | The kitten jumped onto the table | Coleńa legse pa vor ĺaru |
| 17 | My little kitten walked away | Ma coleńa beca cegse ava |
| 18 | It's raining | Vlava ćide |
| 19 | The rain came down | Vlauzda ćise |
| 20 | The kitten is playing in the rain | Coleńazda vŏreide e vlaûzdu |
| 21 | The rain has stopped | |
| 22 | Soon the rain will stop | |
| 23 | I hope the rain stops soon | |
| 24 | Once wild animals lived here | |
| 25 | Slowly she looked around | |
| 26 | Go away! | |
| 27 | Let's go! | |
| 28 | You should go | |
| 29 | I will be happy to go | |
| 30 | He will arrive soon | |
| 31 | The baby's ball has rolled away | |
| 32 | The two boys are working together | |
| 33 | This mist will probably clear away | |
| 34 | Lovely flowers are growing everywhere | |
| 35 | We should eat more slowly | |
| 36 | You have come too soon | |
| 37 | You must write more neatly | |
| 38 | Directly opposite stands a wonderful palace | |
| 39 | Henry's dog is lost | |
| 40 | My cat is black | |
| 41 | The little girl's doll is broken | |
| 42 | I usually sleep soundly | |
| 43 | The children ran after Jack | |
| 44 | I can play after school | |
| 45 | We went to the village for a visit | |
| 46 | We arrived at the river | |
| 47 | I have been waiting for you | |
| 48 | The campers sat around the fire | |
| 49 | A little girl with a kitten sat near me | |
| 50 | The child waited at the door for her father | |
| 51 | Yesterday the oldest girl in the village lost her kitten | |
| 52 | Were you born in this village? | |
| 53 | Can your brother dance well? | |
| 54 | Did the man leave? | |
| 55 | Is your sister coming for you? | |
| 56 | Can you come tomorrow? | |
| 57 | Have the neighbors gone away for the winter? | |
| 58 | Does the robin sing in the rain? | |
| 59 | Are you going with us to the concert? | |
| 60 | Have you ever travelled in the jungle? | |
| 61 | We sailed down the river for several miles | |
| 62 | Everybody knows about hunting | |
| 63 | On a Sunny morning after the solstice we started for the mountains | |
| 64 | Tom laughed at the monkey's tricks | |
| 65 | An old man with a walking stick stood beside the fence | |
| 66 | The squirrel's nest was hidden by drooping boughs | |
| 67 | The little seeds waited patiently under the snow for the warm spring sun | |
| 68 | Many little girls with wreaths of flowers on their heads danced around the bonfire | |
| 69 | The cover of the basket fell to the floor | |
| 70 | The first boy in the line stopped at the entrance | |
| 71 | On the top of the hill in a little hut lived a wise old woman | |
| 72 | During our residence in the country we often walked in the pastures | |
| 73 | When will your guests from the city arrive? | |
| 74 | Near the mouth of the river, its course turns sharply towards the East | |
| 75 | Between the two lofty mountains lay a fertile valley | |
| 76 | Among the wheat grew tall red poppies | |
| 77 | The strong roots of the oak trees were torn from the ground | |
| 78 | The sun looked down through the branches upon the children at play | |
| 79 | The west wind blew across my face like a friendly caress | |
| 80 | The spool of thread rolled across the floor | |
| 81 | A box of growing plants stood in the Window | |
| 82 | I am very happy | |
| 83 | These oranges are juicy | |
| 84 | Sea water is salty | |
| 85 | The streets are full of people | |
| 86 | Sugar tastes sweet | |
| 87 | The fire feels hot | |
| 88 | The little girl seemed lonely | |
| 89 | The little boy's father had once been a sailor | |
| 90 | I have lost my blanket | |
| 91 | A robin has built his nest in the apple tree | |
| 92 | At noon we ate our lunch by the roadside | |
| 93 | Mr Jones made a knife for his little boy | |
| 94 | Their voices sound very happy | |
| 95 | Is today Monday? | |
| 96 | Have all the leaves fallen from the tree? | |
| 97 | Will you be ready on time? | |
| 98 | Will you send this message for me? | |
| 99 | Are you waiting for me? | |
| 100 | Is this the first kitten of the litter? | |
| 101 | Are these shoes too big for you? | |
| 102 | How wide is the River? | |
| 103 | Listen | |
| 104 | Sit here by me | |
| 105 | Keep this secret until tomorrow | |
| 106 | Come with us | |
| 107 | Bring your friends with you | |
| 108 | Be careful | |
| 109 | Have some tea | |
| 110 | Pip and his dog were great friends | |
| 111 | John and Elizabeth are brother and sister | |
| 112 | You and I will go together | |
| 113 | They opened all the doors and windows | |
| 114 | He is small, but strong | |
| 115 | Is this tree an oak or a maple? | |
| 116 | Does the sky look blue or gray? | |
| 117 | Come with your father or mother | |
| 118 | I am tired, but very happy | |
| 119 | He played a tune on his wonderful flute | |
| 120 | Toward the end of August the days grow much shorter | |
| 121 | A company of soldiers marched over the hill and across the meadow | |
| 122 | The first part of the story is very interesting | |
| 123 | The crow dropped some pebbles into the pitcher and raised the water to the brim | |
| 124 | The baby clapped her hands and laughed in glee | |
| 125 | Stop your game and be quiet | |
| 126 | The sound of the drums grew louder and louder | |
| 127 | Do you like summer or winter better? | |
| 128 | That boy will have a wonderful trip | |
| 129 | They popped corn, and then sat around the fire and ate it | |
| 130 | They won the first two games, but lost the last one | |
| 131 | Take this note, carry it to your mother; and wait for an answer | |
| 132 | I awoke early, dressed hastily, and went down to breakfast | |
| 133 | Aha! I have caught you! | |
| 134 | This string is too short! | |
| 135 | Oh, dear! the wind has blown my hat away! | |
| 136 | Alas! that news is sad indeed! | |
| 137 | Whew! that cold wind freezes my nose! | |
| 138 | Are you warm enough now? | |
| 139 | They heard the warning too late | |
| 140 | We are a brave people, and love our country | |
| 141 | All the children came except Mary | |
| 142 | Jack seized a handful of pebbles and threw them into the lake | |
| 143 | This cottage stood on a low hill, at some distance from the village | |
| 144 | On a fine summer evening, the two old people were sitting outside the door of their cottage | |
| 145 | Our bird's name is Jacko | |
| 146 | The river knows the way to the sea | |
| 147 | The boat sails away, like a bird on the wing | |
| 148 | They looked cautiously about, but saw nothing | |
| 149 | The little house had three rooms, a sitting room, a bedroom, and a tiny kitchen | |
| 150 | We visited my uncle's village, the largest village in the world | |
| 151 | We learn something new each day | |
| 152 | The market begins five minutes earlier this week | |
| 153 | Did you find the distance too great? | |
| 154 | Hurry, children | |
| 155 | Madam, I will obey your command | |
| 156 | Here under this tree they gave their guests a splendid feast | |
| 157 | In winter I get up at night, and dress by yellow candlelight | |
| 158 | Tell the last part of that story again | |
| 159 | Be quick or you will be too late | |
| 160 | Will you go with us or wait here? | |
| 161 | She was always, shabby, often ragged, and on cold days very uncomfortable | |
| 162 | Think first and then act | |
| 163 | I stood, a little mite of a girl, upon a chair by the window, and watched the falling snowflakes | |
| 164 | Show the guests these shells, my son, and tell them their strange history | |
| 165 | Be satisfied with nothing but your best | |
| 166 | We consider them our faithful friends | |
| 167 | We will make this place our home | |
| 168 | The squirrels make their nests warm and snug with soft moss and leaves | |
| 169 | The little girl made the doll's dress herself | |
| 170 | I hurt myself | |
| 171 | She was talking to herself | |
| 172 | He proved himself trustworthy | |
| 173 | We could see ourselves in the water | |
| 174 | Do it yourself | |
| 175 | I feel ashamed of myself | |
| 176 | Sit here by yourself | |
| 177 | The dress of the little princess was embroidered with roses, the national flower of the Country | |
| 178 | They wore red caps, the symbol of liberty | |
| 179 | With him as our protector, we fear no danger | |
| 180 | All her finery, lace, ribbons, and feathers, was packed away in a trunk | |
| 181 | Light he thought her, like a feather | |
| 182 | Every spring and fall our cousins pay us a long visit | |
| 183 | In our climate the grass remains green all winter | |
| 184 | The boy who brought the book has gone | |
| 185 | These are the flowers that you ordered | |
| 186 | I have lost the book that you gave me | |
| 187 | The fisherman who owned the boat now demanded payment | |
| 188 | Come when you are called | |
| 189 | I shall stay at home if it rains | |
| 190 | When he saw me, he stopped | |
| 191 | Do not laugh at me because I seem so absent minded | |
| 192 | I shall lend you the books that you need | |
| 193 | Come early next Monday if you can | |
| 194 | If you come early, wait in the hall | |
| 195 | I had a younger brother whose name was Antonio | |
| 196 | Gnomes are little men who live under the ground | |
| 197 | He is loved by everybody, because he has a gentle disposition | |
| 198 | Hold the horse while I run and get my cap | |
| 199 | I have found the ring I lost | |
| 200 | Play and I will sing | |
| 201 | That is the funniest story I ever heard | |
| 202 | She is taller than her brother | |
| 203 | They are no wiser than we | |
| 204 | Light travels faster than sound | |
| 205 | We have more time than they | |
| 206 | She has more friends than enemies | |
| 207 | He was very poor, and with his wife and five children lived in a little low cabin of logs and stones | |
| 208 | When the wind blew, the traveler wrapped his mantle more closely around him | |
| 209 | I am sure that we can go | |
| 210 | We went back to the place where we saw the roses | |
| 211 | "This tree is fifty feet high," said the gardener | |
| 212 | I think that this train leaves five minutes earlier today | |
| 213 | My opinion is that the governor will grant him a pardon | |
| 214 | Why he has left the city is a mystery | |
| 215 | The house stands where three roads meet | |
| 216 | He has far more money than brains | |
| 217 | Evidently that gate is never opened, for the long grass and the great hemlocks grow close against it | |
| 218 | I met a little cottage girl; she was eight years old, she said |