@syllst/ka 0.3.7 → 0.3.8

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Files changed (131) hide show
  1. package/dist/index.d.ts +7 -80
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  7. package/dist/syllabi/alphabet/index.d.ts +2 -5
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  9. package/dist/syllabi/dialogue/index.d.ts +2 -5
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  11. package/dist/syllabi/essentials/index.d.ts +2 -5
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  13. package/dist/syllabi/grammar/index.d.ts +2 -5
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  15. package/dist/syllabi/numbers/index.d.ts +2 -5
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  17. package/dist/syllabi/reading/index.d.ts +2 -5
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- const n = `---
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- type: lesson
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- id: georgian-essentials-lesson-06
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- title: "გაკვეთილი 6 — გავრცელებული პასუხები"
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- description: "Common Responses: Yes, no, I understand, and essential replies"
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- order: 6
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- parentId: georgian-essentials
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- difficulty: beginner
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- cefrLevel: A1
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- categories:
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- - responses
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- - conversation
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- - basics
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- metadata:
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- estimatedTime: 30
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- prerequisites:
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- - georgian-essentials-lesson-05
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- learningObjectives:
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- - id: obj-responses-yes-no
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- description: "Say yes and no appropriately in Georgian"
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- skill: word-production
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- - id: obj-responses-understand
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- description: "Express understanding and non-understanding"
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- skill: situational-response
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- - id: obj-responses-agree-disagree
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- description: "Agree and disagree politely"
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- skill: polite-register
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- - id: obj-responses-common-phrases
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- description: "Use common filler and response phrases"
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- skill: dialogue-comprehension
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- ---
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-
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- # გაკვეთილი 6 (Lesson 6) — Common Responses
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-
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- ## Introduction
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-
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- A conversation is not just asking questions — it is also responding to what you hear. In this final lesson of the Georgian Essentials syllabus, you will learn the responses that let you participate fully in simple exchanges: agreeing, disagreeing, expressing understanding, asking for repetition, and more.
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-
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- ## Yes and No
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ka-yes-no" title="Yes and No"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="diakh" word="დიახ" pronunciation="di-akh" meaning="Yes (formal)"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ki" word="კი" pronunciation="ki" meaning="Yes (informal/everyday)"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ara" word="არა" pronunciation="a-ra" meaning="No"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ara-ara" word="არა, არა" pronunciation="a-ra, a-ra" meaning="No, no (emphatic)"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="albaT" word="ალბათ" pronunciation="al-bat" meaning="Probably / Maybe"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- Georgian has two words for "yes": **კი** (ki) for everyday use and **დიახ** (diakh) for formal situations. Use კი with friends and people your age; use დიახ in professional, official, or respectful contexts.
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-
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- ## Expressing Understanding
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ka-understanding" title="Understanding and Not Understanding"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="gesmi" word="გესმის?" pronunciation="ges-mis?" meaning="Do you understand? (informal)"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="mesmis" word="მესმის" pronunciation="mes-mis" meaning="I understand"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ar-mesmis" word="არ მესმის" pronunciation="ar mes-mis" meaning="I don't understand"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="gavige" word="გავიგე" pronunciation="ga-vi-ge" meaning="I understood / I got it"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ar-gavige" word="არ გავიგე" pronunciation="ar ga-vi-ge" meaning="I didn't understand"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## Asking for Help When Stuck
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-
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- These phrases are invaluable for language learners:
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ka-learner-phrases" title="Useful Learner Phrases"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="gaimeore" word="გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ" pronunciation="ga-me-o-ret, g-tkhovt" meaning="Please repeat that"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="nela-ilaparakeb" word="ნელა ილაპარაკეთ, გთხოვთ" pronunciation="ne-la i-la-pa-ra-ket, g-tkhovt" meaning="Please speak slowly"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="ras-niShnavs" word="ეს რას ნიშნავს?" pronunciation="es ras nish-navs?" meaning="What does this mean?"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="kartulad-itqvit" word="ქართულად როგორ ითქმის?" pronunciation="kar-tu-lad ro-gor it-kh-mis?" meaning="How do you say it in Georgian?"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## Agreeing and Disagreeing
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-
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- | Georgian | Pronunciation | Meaning |
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- |----------|---------------|---------|
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- | სწორია | its-ori-a | That's correct |
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- | არ ვეთანხმები | ar ve-tan-khme-bi | I disagree |
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- | მართალი ხარ | mar-ta-li khar | You are right (informal) |
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- | მართალი ხართ | mar-ta-li khart | You are right (formal) |
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- | ვეთანხმები | ve-tan-khme-bi | I agree |
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- | კარგია | kar-gi-a | That's good / Okay |
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-
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- ## Common Filler Responses
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-
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- These short responses keep conversation flowing:
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ka-fillers" title="Common Response Phrases"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="kargi" word="კარგი" pronunciation="kar-gi" meaning="Good / Okay / Alright"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="mshvenieri" word="მშვენიერი" pronunciation="mshve-ni-e-ri" meaning="Wonderful / Excellent"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="tsudi-ara" word="ცუდი არ არის" pronunciation="tsu-di ar a-ris" meaning="Not bad"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="gasagebia" word="გასაგებია" pronunciation="ga-sa-ge-bi-a" meaning="Understandable / I see"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="martla" word="მართლა?" pronunciation="mar-tla?" meaning="Really?"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## Putting It All Together: A Full Conversation
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- **A**: გამარჯობა! როგორ ხარ? (Hello! How are you?)
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- **B**: კარგად, მადლობა. შენ? (Fine, thanks. And you?)
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- **A**: მეც კარგად. ქართული ისწავლი? (I'm also fine. Are you learning Georgian?)
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- **B**: კი, ვსწავლობ. ცოტა ვიცი. (Yes, I'm learning. I know a little.)
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- **A**: კარგია! ქართული ადვილია? (That's good! Is Georgian easy?)
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- **B**: არა, ძნელია, მაგრამ საინტერესოა. (No, it's hard, but it's interesting.)
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- **A**: მართალი ხარ! (You're right!)
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- **B**: გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ — "ძნელია" — ეს რას ნიშნავს? (Please repeat — "dzneliа" — what does it mean?)
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- **A**: ძნელია ნიშნავს "it is difficult." (Dzneliа means "it is difficult.")
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- **B**: გავიგე, მადლობა! (I understood, thank you!)
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-
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- ## Key Points
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-
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- 1. **კი for everyday yes**: Use with friends; დიახ is formal
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- 2. **არა is always no**: Both formal and informal
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- 3. **მესმის / არ მესმის**: I understand / I don't understand
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- 4. **გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ**: Please repeat — use this freely as a learner
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- 5. **კარგი is versatile**: Good, okay, alright, accepted
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-
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- ## Practice Exercises
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- :::exercise{id="ka-ess-06-yes-no" type="fill-in-blank" title="Yes and No" skill="word-production" objectiveId="obj-responses-yes-no"}
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-
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- **Question:** Fill in the blanks with the correct Georgian word
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-
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- 1. Your friend asks if you want coffee. You say yes: ___
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- 2. A government official asks if you have a passport. You say yes (formally): ___
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- 3. Someone offers you something you don't want: ___
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- **Answer:**
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- 1. კი (informal yes, for a friend)
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- 2. დიახ (formal yes, for an official)
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- 3. არა, მადლობა (No, thank you)
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- **Explanation:** კი is for everyday informal situations. დიახ shows more formality and respect. When declining, always add მადლობა (thank you) to soften the refusal — this is considered polite in Georgian culture.
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- :::
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- :::exercise{id="ka-ess-06-understand" type="matching" title="Understanding Phrases" skill="situational-response" objectiveId="obj-responses-understand"}
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- **Question:** Match each phrase to the correct situation
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- - მესმის
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- - არ მესმის
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- - გავიგე
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- - გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ
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-
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- **Answer:**
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- - მესმის = I understand (present, ongoing)
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- - არ მესმის = I don't understand (present, ongoing)
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- - გავიგე = I understood / I got it (past, just now)
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- - გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ = Please repeat that (when you missed something)
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- **Explanation:** მესმის and გავიგე both relate to understanding, but მესმის is ongoing ("I follow you") while გავიგე is a completed action ("I caught that"). Use გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ freely — Georgians will be happy to help you understand.
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- :::
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- :::exercise{id="ka-ess-06-agree-disagree" type="multiple-choice" title="Agreeing Politely" skill="polite-register" objectiveId="obj-responses-agree-disagree"}
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- **Question:** Your Georgian host says "Georgian food is the best in the world." You want to agree enthusiastically. Which response is best?
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- **Options:**
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- - არა
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- - ვეთანხმები! მშვენიერია!
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- - არ ვეთანხმები
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- - გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ
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- **Answer:** 2
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- **Explanation:** ვეთანხმები means "I agree" and მშვენიერია means "It's wonderful/excellent." Combining them makes an enthusiastic agreement. At a Georgian table (supra), enthusiastic appreciation of the food and culture is warmly received and culturally appropriate.
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- :::
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- :::exercise{id="ka-ess-06-common-phrases" type="fill-in-blank" title="Common Response Phrases" skill="dialogue-comprehension" objectiveId="obj-responses-common-phrases"}
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- **Question:** What Georgian phrase would you use to say "Really?" when surprised by something
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- **Answer:**
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- მართლა?
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- **Explanation:** მართლა? is a natural exclamation of surprise or interest, equivalent to "Really?" or "Is that so?" in English. It is very commonly used in casual Georgian conversation and shows you are engaged in what the other person is saying.
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- :::
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- ## Congratulations!
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- You have completed the Georgian Essentials syllabus. You can now:
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- - Greet and say farewell in Georgian
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- - Express thanks and apologies
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- - Introduce yourself and ask about others
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- - Ask and understand basic questions
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- - Use numbers in practical contexts
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- - Respond naturally in everyday conversations
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- Continue your Georgian learning journey with the Alphabet syllabus to master reading Mkhedruli, or explore the Numbers syllabus for a deeper dive into Georgian counting.
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- ბევრი წარმატება! (Good luck! / Much success!)
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- `;
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- export {
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- n as default
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- };
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- //# sourceMappingURL=lesson-06-C_aRLClN.js.map
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- {"version":3,"file":"lesson-06-C_aRLClN.js","sources":["../src/syllabi/essentials/lessons/lesson-06.mdx?raw"],"sourcesContent":["export default \"---\\ntype: lesson\\nid: georgian-essentials-lesson-06\\ntitle: \\\"გაკვეთილი 6 — გავრცელებული პასუხები\\\"\\ndescription: \\\"Common Responses: Yes, no, I understand, and essential replies\\\"\\norder: 6\\nparentId: georgian-essentials\\ndifficulty: beginner\\ncefrLevel: A1\\ncategories:\\n - responses\\n - conversation\\n - basics\\nmetadata:\\n estimatedTime: 30\\n prerequisites:\\n - georgian-essentials-lesson-05\\n learningObjectives:\\n - id: obj-responses-yes-no\\n description: \\\"Say yes and no appropriately in Georgian\\\"\\n skill: word-production\\n - id: obj-responses-understand\\n description: \\\"Express understanding and non-understanding\\\"\\n skill: situational-response\\n - id: obj-responses-agree-disagree\\n description: \\\"Agree and disagree politely\\\"\\n skill: polite-register\\n - id: obj-responses-common-phrases\\n description: \\\"Use common filler and response phrases\\\"\\n skill: dialogue-comprehension\\n---\\n\\n# გაკვეთილი 6 (Lesson 6) — Common Responses\\n\\n## Introduction\\n\\nA conversation is not just asking questions — it is also responding to what you hear. In this final lesson of the Georgian Essentials syllabus, you will learn the responses that let you participate fully in simple exchanges: agreeing, disagreeing, expressing understanding, asking for repetition, and more.\\n\\n## Yes and No\\n\\n:::vocabulary-set{id=\\\"ka-yes-no\\\" title=\\\"Yes and No\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"diakh\\\" word=\\\"დიახ\\\" pronunciation=\\\"di-akh\\\" meaning=\\\"Yes (formal)\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"ki\\\" word=\\\"კი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"ki\\\" meaning=\\\"Yes (informal/everyday)\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"ara\\\" word=\\\"არა\\\" pronunciation=\\\"a-ra\\\" meaning=\\\"No\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"ara-ara\\\" word=\\\"არა, არა\\\" pronunciation=\\\"a-ra, a-ra\\\" meaning=\\\"No, no (emphatic)\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"albaT\\\" word=\\\"ალბათ\\\" pronunciation=\\\"al-bat\\\" meaning=\\\"Probably / Maybe\\\"}\\n\\n:::\\n\\nGeorgian has two words for \\\"yes\\\": **კი** (ki) for everyday use and **დიახ** (diakh) for formal situations. Use კი with friends and people your age; use დიახ in professional, official, or respectful contexts.\\n\\n## Expressing Understanding\\n\\n:::vocabulary-set{id=\\\"ka-understanding\\\" title=\\\"Understanding and Not Understanding\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"gesmi\\\" word=\\\"გესმის?\\\" pronunciation=\\\"ges-mis?\\\" meaning=\\\"Do you understand? (informal)\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"mesmis\\\" word=\\\"მესმის\\\" pronunciation=\\\"mes-mis\\\" meaning=\\\"I understand\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"ar-mesmis\\\" word=\\\"არ მესმის\\\" pronunciation=\\\"ar mes-mis\\\" meaning=\\\"I don't understand\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"gavige\\\" word=\\\"გავიგე\\\" pronunciation=\\\"ga-vi-ge\\\" meaning=\\\"I understood / I got it\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"ar-gavige\\\" word=\\\"არ გავიგე\\\" pronunciation=\\\"ar ga-vi-ge\\\" meaning=\\\"I didn't understand\\\"}\\n\\n:::\\n\\n## Asking for Help When Stuck\\n\\nThese phrases are invaluable for language learners:\\n\\n:::vocabulary-set{id=\\\"ka-learner-phrases\\\" title=\\\"Useful Learner Phrases\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"gaimeore\\\" word=\\\"გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ\\\" pronunciation=\\\"ga-me-o-ret, g-tkhovt\\\" meaning=\\\"Please repeat that\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"nela-ilaparakeb\\\" word=\\\"ნელა ილაპარაკეთ, გთხოვთ\\\" pronunciation=\\\"ne-la i-la-pa-ra-ket, g-tkhovt\\\" meaning=\\\"Please speak slowly\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"ras-niShnavs\\\" word=\\\"ეს რას ნიშნავს?\\\" pronunciation=\\\"es ras nish-navs?\\\" meaning=\\\"What does this mean?\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"kartulad-itqvit\\\" word=\\\"ქართულად როგორ ითქმის?\\\" pronunciation=\\\"kar-tu-lad ro-gor it-kh-mis?\\\" meaning=\\\"How do you say it in Georgian?\\\"}\\n\\n:::\\n\\n## Agreeing and Disagreeing\\n\\n| Georgian | Pronunciation | Meaning |\\n|----------|---------------|---------|\\n| სწორია | its-ori-a | That's correct |\\n| არ ვეთანხმები | ar ve-tan-khme-bi | I disagree |\\n| მართალი ხარ | mar-ta-li khar | You are right (informal) |\\n| მართალი ხართ | mar-ta-li khart | You are right (formal) |\\n| ვეთანხმები | ve-tan-khme-bi | I agree |\\n| კარგია | kar-gi-a | That's good / Okay |\\n\\n## Common Filler Responses\\n\\nThese short responses keep conversation flowing:\\n\\n:::vocabulary-set{id=\\\"ka-fillers\\\" title=\\\"Common Response Phrases\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"kargi\\\" word=\\\"კარგი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"kar-gi\\\" meaning=\\\"Good / Okay / Alright\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"mshvenieri\\\" word=\\\"მშვენიერი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"mshve-ni-e-ri\\\" meaning=\\\"Wonderful / Excellent\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"tsudi-ara\\\" word=\\\"ცუდი არ არის\\\" pronunciation=\\\"tsu-di ar a-ris\\\" meaning=\\\"Not bad\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"gasagebia\\\" word=\\\"გასაგებია\\\" pronunciation=\\\"ga-sa-ge-bi-a\\\" meaning=\\\"Understandable / I see\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"martla\\\" word=\\\"მართლა?\\\" pronunciation=\\\"mar-tla?\\\" meaning=\\\"Really?\\\"}\\n\\n:::\\n\\n## Putting It All Together: A Full Conversation\\n\\n**A**: გამარჯობა! როგორ ხარ? (Hello! How are you?)\\n**B**: კარგად, მადლობა. შენ? (Fine, thanks. And you?)\\n**A**: მეც კარგად. ქართული ისწავლი? (I'm also fine. Are you learning Georgian?)\\n**B**: კი, ვსწავლობ. ცოტა ვიცი. (Yes, I'm learning. I know a little.)\\n**A**: კარგია! ქართული ადვილია? (That's good! Is Georgian easy?)\\n**B**: არა, ძნელია, მაგრამ საინტერესოა. (No, it's hard, but it's interesting.)\\n**A**: მართალი ხარ! (You're right!)\\n**B**: გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ — \\\"ძნელია\\\" — ეს რას ნიშნავს? (Please repeat — \\\"dzneliа\\\" — what does it mean?)\\n**A**: ძნელია ნიშნავს \\\"it is difficult.\\\" (Dzneliа means \\\"it is difficult.\\\")\\n**B**: გავიგე, მადლობა! (I understood, thank you!)\\n\\n## Key Points\\n\\n1. **კი for everyday yes**: Use with friends; დიახ is formal\\n2. **არა is always no**: Both formal and informal\\n3. **მესმის / არ მესმის**: I understand / I don't understand\\n4. **გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ**: Please repeat — use this freely as a learner\\n5. **კარგი is versatile**: Good, okay, alright, accepted\\n\\n## Practice Exercises\\n\\n:::exercise{id=\\\"ka-ess-06-yes-no\\\" type=\\\"fill-in-blank\\\" title=\\\"Yes and No\\\" skill=\\\"word-production\\\" objectiveId=\\\"obj-responses-yes-no\\\"}\\n\\n**Question:** Fill in the blanks with the correct Georgian word\\n\\n1. Your friend asks if you want coffee. You say yes: ___\\n2. A government official asks if you have a passport. You say yes (formally): ___\\n3. Someone offers you something you don't want: ___\\n\\n**Answer:**\\n\\n1. კი (informal yes, for a friend)\\n2. დიახ (formal yes, for an official)\\n3. არა, მადლობა (No, thank you)\\n\\n**Explanation:** კი is for everyday informal situations. დიახ shows more formality and respect. When declining, always add მადლობა (thank you) to soften the refusal — this is considered polite in Georgian culture.\\n\\n:::\\n\\n:::exercise{id=\\\"ka-ess-06-understand\\\" type=\\\"matching\\\" title=\\\"Understanding Phrases\\\" skill=\\\"situational-response\\\" objectiveId=\\\"obj-responses-understand\\\"}\\n\\n**Question:** Match each phrase to the correct situation\\n\\n- მესმის\\n- არ მესმის\\n- გავიგე\\n- გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ\\n\\n**Answer:**\\n\\n- მესმის = I understand (present, ongoing)\\n- არ მესმის = I don't understand (present, ongoing)\\n- გავიგე = I understood / I got it (past, just now)\\n- გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ = Please repeat that (when you missed something)\\n\\n**Explanation:** მესმის and გავიგე both relate to understanding, but მესმის is ongoing (\\\"I follow you\\\") while გავიგე is a completed action (\\\"I caught that\\\"). Use გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ freely — Georgians will be happy to help you understand.\\n\\n:::\\n\\n:::exercise{id=\\\"ka-ess-06-agree-disagree\\\" type=\\\"multiple-choice\\\" title=\\\"Agreeing Politely\\\" skill=\\\"polite-register\\\" objectiveId=\\\"obj-responses-agree-disagree\\\"}\\n\\n**Question:** Your Georgian host says \\\"Georgian food is the best in the world.\\\" You want to agree enthusiastically. Which response is best?\\n\\n**Options:**\\n- არა\\n- ვეთანხმები! მშვენიერია!\\n- არ ვეთანხმები\\n- გამეორეთ, გთხოვთ\\n\\n**Answer:** 2\\n\\n**Explanation:** ვეთანხმები means \\\"I agree\\\" and მშვენიერია means \\\"It's wonderful/excellent.\\\" Combining them makes an enthusiastic agreement. At a Georgian table (supra), enthusiastic appreciation of the food and culture is warmly received and culturally appropriate.\\n\\n:::\\n\\n:::exercise{id=\\\"ka-ess-06-common-phrases\\\" type=\\\"fill-in-blank\\\" title=\\\"Common Response Phrases\\\" skill=\\\"dialogue-comprehension\\\" objectiveId=\\\"obj-responses-common-phrases\\\"}\\n\\n**Question:** What Georgian phrase would you use to say \\\"Really?\\\" when surprised by something\\n\\n**Answer:**\\n\\nმართლა?\\n\\n**Explanation:** მართლა? is a natural exclamation of surprise or interest, equivalent to \\\"Really?\\\" or \\\"Is that so?\\\" in English. It is very commonly used in casual Georgian conversation and shows you are engaged in what the other person is saying.\\n\\n:::\\n\\n## Congratulations!\\n\\nYou have completed the Georgian Essentials syllabus. You can now:\\n- Greet and say farewell in Georgian\\n- Express thanks and apologies\\n- Introduce yourself and ask about others\\n- Ask and understand basic questions\\n- Use numbers in practical contexts\\n- Respond naturally in everyday conversations\\n\\nContinue your Georgian learning journey with the Alphabet syllabus to master reading Mkhedruli, or explore the Numbers syllabus for a deeper dive into Georgian counting.\\n\\nბევრი წარმატება! (Good luck! / Much success!)\\n\""],"names":["lesson06"],"mappings":"AAAA,MAAAA,IAAe;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;"}
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- const n = `---
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- type: lesson
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- id: georgian-reading-lesson-06
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- title: "გაკვეთილი 6 — პრაქტიკული დოკუმენტები (Practical Documents)"
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- description: "Reading addresses, phone numbers, and basic forms in Georgian"
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- order: 6
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- parentId: georgian-reading
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- difficulty: intermediate
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- cefrLevel: A2
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- categories:
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- - reading
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- - practical
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- - documents
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- metadata:
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- estimatedTime: 35
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- prerequisites:
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- - georgian-reading-lesson-05
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- learningObjectives:
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- - id: obj-read-06-read-addresses
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- description: "Read and understand Georgian addresses and location information"
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- skill: text-decoding
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- - id: obj-read-06-form-vocab
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- description: "Recognize key vocabulary on Georgian forms and documents"
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- skill: word-recognition
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- - id: obj-read-06-document-comprehension
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- description: "Extract relevant information from practical Georgian documents"
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- skill: reading-comprehension
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- ---
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-
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- # გაკვეთილი 6 (Lesson 6) — Practical Documents
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-
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- ## Introduction
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-
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- Practical reading skills go beyond menus and signs. You will encounter Georgian text on hotel registration forms, taxi receipts, booking confirmations, and address labels. This lesson prepares you to extract the information you need from these everyday documents.
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-
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- ## Address Vocabulary
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ka-read-06-address" title="Address Terms"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="gamziri" word="გამზირი" pronunciation="gam-zi-ri" meaning="avenue / boulevard"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="quchis" word="ქუჩა" pronunciation="qu-cha" meaning="street"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="shinaarsi" word="შინაარსი" pronunciation="shi-na-ar-si" meaning="content / description"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="nomeri-addr" word="ნომერი" pronunciation="no-me-ri" meaning="number"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="qalaqi" word="ქალაქი" pronunciation="qa-la-qi" meaning="city / town"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="sofel" word="სოფელი" pronunciation="so-fe-li" meaning="village"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="indeksi" word="საფოსტო ინდექსი" pronunciation="sa-fos-to in-deq-si" meaning="postal code / zip code"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## Reading a Georgian Address
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-
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- A typical Georgian address reads:
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-
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- **თბილისი, რუსთაველის გამზირი, №8**
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- (Tbilisi, Rustaveli Avenue, No. 8)
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-
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- **ქუთაისი, ლაშა-გიორგის ქუჩა, №15, ბინა 4**
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- (Kutaisi, Lasha-Giorgi Street, No. 15, Apartment 4)
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-
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- Key address terms:
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- - **გამზირი** = avenue (wide street)
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- - **ქუჩა** = street
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- - **ბინა** = apartment / flat
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- - **№** = number
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-
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- ## Form Vocabulary
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-
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- :::vocabulary-set{id="ka-read-06-forms" title="Form Fields"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="saxeli" word="სახელი" pronunciation="sa-khe-li" meaning="first name"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="gvari-form" word="გვარი" pronunciation="gva-ri" meaning="surname / family name"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="dagb-tariqi" word="დაბადების თარიღი" pronunciation="da-ba-de-bis ta-righ" meaning="date of birth"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="moqalaqeoba" word="მოქალაქეობა" pronunciation="mo-qa-la-qe-o-ba" meaning="citizenship / nationality"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="pasporti" word="პასპორტი" pronunciation="pas-por-ti" meaning="passport"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="telefonis-nomeri" word="ტელეფონის ნომერი" pronunciation="te-le-fo-nis no-me-ri" meaning="phone number"}
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-
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- ::vocab-item{id="momxmareblis-saxeli" word="ელ-ფოსტა" pronunciation="el-fos-ta" meaning="email / electronic mail"}
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-
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- :::
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-
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- ## A Sample Hotel Registration Form
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-
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- ---
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-
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- **სასტუმროს სარეგისტრაციო ბარათი**
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- *(Hotel Registration Card)*
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-
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- სახელი: _______________
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- *(First Name)*
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-
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- გვარი: _______________
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- *(Surname)*
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-
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- მოქალაქეობა: _______________
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- *(Nationality)*
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-
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- პასპორტის ნომერი: _______________
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- *(Passport Number)*
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-
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- ჩასვლის თარიღი: _______________
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- *(Arrival Date)*
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-
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- გასვლის თარიღი: _______________
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- *(Departure Date)*
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-
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- ტელეფონის ნომერი: _______________
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- *(Phone Number)*
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-
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- ---
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-
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- ## Reading Dates in Georgian
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-
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- Georgian dates use the format: **day + month name + year**
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-
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- | Georgian Month | Transliteration | Meaning |
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- |----------------|-----------------|---------|
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- | იანვარი | ia-nva-ri | January |
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- | თებერვალი | te-ber-va-li | February |
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- | მარტი | mar-ti | March |
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- | აპრილი | ap-ri-li | April |
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- | მაისი | ma-i-si | May |
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- | ივნისი | iv-ni-si | June |
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-
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- Example: **15 მარტი 2025** = 15 March 2025
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-
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- ## Cultural Note: Georgian Surnames
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-
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- Georgian surnames have distinct masculine and feminine forms. Masculine surnames often end in **-ი** or **-ძე** (dzе, meaning "son of") or **-შვილი** (shvili, meaning "child of"). Feminine surnames often end in **-ა**. For example, the male surname **გელაშვილი** (Gelashvili) becomes **გელაშვილი** for females as well — though historically it was **გელაშვილა**. This makes Georgian names recognizable and grammatically systematic.
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-
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- ## Practice Exercises
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-
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- :::exercise{id="ka-read-06-address-decode" type="fill-in-blank" title="Read the Address" skill="text-decoding" objectiveId="obj-read-06-read-addresses"}
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-
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- **Question:** Read the address and answer the questions
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-
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- Address: **თბილისი, რუსთაველის გამზირი, №8**
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-
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- 1. What city is this in? ___
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- 2. What is the street type? ___
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- 3. What is the number? ___
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-
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- **Answer:**
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-
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- 1. Tbilisi (თბილისი)
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- 2. Avenue / Boulevard (გამზირი)
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- 3. 8 (№8)
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-
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- **Explanation:** Georgian addresses follow the pattern: city, street name + type, number. თბილისი is Tbilisi, რუსთაველის is the genitive of the name Rustaveli, გამზირი means avenue.
160
-
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- :::
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-
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- :::exercise{id="ka-read-06-form-vocab" type="matching" title="Form Fields" skill="word-recognition" objectiveId="obj-read-06-form-vocab"}
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-
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- **Question:** Match each Georgian form field label to its English equivalent
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-
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- - სახელი
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- - გვარი
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- - მოქალაქეობა
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- - პასპორტი
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- - ელ-ფოსტა
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-
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- **Answer:**
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-
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- - სახელი → first name
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- - გვარი → surname
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- - მოქალაქეობა → citizenship / nationality
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- - პასპორტი → passport
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- - ელ-ფოსტა → email
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-
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- **Explanation:** სახელი literally means "name." გვარი is the family name/surname. მოქალაქეობა comes from მოქალაქე (citizen). ელ-ფოსტა is a direct calque from "electronic post."
182
-
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- :::
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-
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- :::exercise{id="ka-read-06-document-comprehension" type="multiple-choice" title="Extract Information" skill="reading-comprehension" objectiveId="obj-read-06-document-comprehension"}
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-
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- **Question:** On the hotel registration form, which field asks for your family name?
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-
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- **Options:**
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- - სახელი
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- - გვარი
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- - მოქალაქეობა
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- - ელ-ფოსტა
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-
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- **Answer:** 2
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-
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- **Explanation:** გვარი is the family name / surname. სახელი is the first/given name. This distinction matters on forms — putting your first name in the გვარი field and your surname in the სახელი field is a common mistake.
198
-
199
- :::
200
-
201
- ## What's Next
202
-
203
- In Lesson 7, you will practice reading short news-style headlines and text — a step up in reading complexity and vocabulary range.
204
- `;
205
- export {
206
- n as default
207
- };
208
- //# sourceMappingURL=lesson-06-Cv5qUy34.js.map
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
1
- {"version":3,"file":"lesson-06-Cv5qUy34.js","sources":["../src/syllabi/reading/lessons/lesson-06.mdx?raw"],"sourcesContent":["export default \"---\\ntype: lesson\\nid: georgian-reading-lesson-06\\ntitle: \\\"გაკვეთილი 6 — პრაქტიკული დოკუმენტები (Practical Documents)\\\"\\ndescription: \\\"Reading addresses, phone numbers, and basic forms in Georgian\\\"\\norder: 6\\nparentId: georgian-reading\\ndifficulty: intermediate\\ncefrLevel: A2\\ncategories:\\n - reading\\n - practical\\n - documents\\nmetadata:\\n estimatedTime: 35\\n prerequisites:\\n - georgian-reading-lesson-05\\n learningObjectives:\\n - id: obj-read-06-read-addresses\\n description: \\\"Read and understand Georgian addresses and location information\\\"\\n skill: text-decoding\\n - id: obj-read-06-form-vocab\\n description: \\\"Recognize key vocabulary on Georgian forms and documents\\\"\\n skill: word-recognition\\n - id: obj-read-06-document-comprehension\\n description: \\\"Extract relevant information from practical Georgian documents\\\"\\n skill: reading-comprehension\\n---\\n\\n# გაკვეთილი 6 (Lesson 6) — Practical Documents\\n\\n## Introduction\\n\\nPractical reading skills go beyond menus and signs. You will encounter Georgian text on hotel registration forms, taxi receipts, booking confirmations, and address labels. This lesson prepares you to extract the information you need from these everyday documents.\\n\\n## Address Vocabulary\\n\\n:::vocabulary-set{id=\\\"ka-read-06-address\\\" title=\\\"Address Terms\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"gamziri\\\" word=\\\"გამზირი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"gam-zi-ri\\\" meaning=\\\"avenue / boulevard\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"quchis\\\" word=\\\"ქუჩა\\\" pronunciation=\\\"qu-cha\\\" meaning=\\\"street\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"shinaarsi\\\" word=\\\"შინაარსი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"shi-na-ar-si\\\" meaning=\\\"content / description\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"nomeri-addr\\\" word=\\\"ნომერი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"no-me-ri\\\" meaning=\\\"number\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"qalaqi\\\" word=\\\"ქალაქი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"qa-la-qi\\\" meaning=\\\"city / town\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"sofel\\\" word=\\\"სოფელი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"so-fe-li\\\" meaning=\\\"village\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"indeksi\\\" word=\\\"საფოსტო ინდექსი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"sa-fos-to in-deq-si\\\" meaning=\\\"postal code / zip code\\\"}\\n\\n:::\\n\\n## Reading a Georgian Address\\n\\nA typical Georgian address reads:\\n\\n**თბილისი, რუსთაველის გამზირი, №8**\\n(Tbilisi, Rustaveli Avenue, No. 8)\\n\\n**ქუთაისი, ლაშა-გიორგის ქუჩა, №15, ბინა 4**\\n(Kutaisi, Lasha-Giorgi Street, No. 15, Apartment 4)\\n\\nKey address terms:\\n- **გამზირი** = avenue (wide street)\\n- **ქუჩა** = street\\n- **ბინა** = apartment / flat\\n- **№** = number\\n\\n## Form Vocabulary\\n\\n:::vocabulary-set{id=\\\"ka-read-06-forms\\\" title=\\\"Form Fields\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"saxeli\\\" word=\\\"სახელი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"sa-khe-li\\\" meaning=\\\"first name\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"gvari-form\\\" word=\\\"გვარი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"gva-ri\\\" meaning=\\\"surname / family name\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"dagb-tariqi\\\" word=\\\"დაბადების თარიღი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"da-ba-de-bis ta-righ\\\" meaning=\\\"date of birth\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"moqalaqeoba\\\" word=\\\"მოქალაქეობა\\\" pronunciation=\\\"mo-qa-la-qe-o-ba\\\" meaning=\\\"citizenship / nationality\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"pasporti\\\" word=\\\"პასპორტი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"pas-por-ti\\\" meaning=\\\"passport\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"telefonis-nomeri\\\" word=\\\"ტელეფონის ნომერი\\\" pronunciation=\\\"te-le-fo-nis no-me-ri\\\" meaning=\\\"phone number\\\"}\\n\\n::vocab-item{id=\\\"momxmareblis-saxeli\\\" word=\\\"ელ-ფოსტა\\\" pronunciation=\\\"el-fos-ta\\\" meaning=\\\"email / electronic mail\\\"}\\n\\n:::\\n\\n## A Sample Hotel Registration Form\\n\\n---\\n\\n**სასტუმროს სარეგისტრაციო ბარათი**\\n*(Hotel Registration Card)*\\n\\nსახელი: _______________\\n*(First Name)*\\n\\nგვარი: _______________\\n*(Surname)*\\n\\nმოქალაქეობა: _______________\\n*(Nationality)*\\n\\nპასპორტის ნომერი: _______________\\n*(Passport Number)*\\n\\nჩასვლის თარიღი: _______________\\n*(Arrival Date)*\\n\\nგასვლის თარიღი: _______________\\n*(Departure Date)*\\n\\nტელეფონის ნომერი: _______________\\n*(Phone Number)*\\n\\n---\\n\\n## Reading Dates in Georgian\\n\\nGeorgian dates use the format: **day + month name + year**\\n\\n| Georgian Month | Transliteration | Meaning |\\n|----------------|-----------------|---------|\\n| იანვარი | ia-nva-ri | January |\\n| თებერვალი | te-ber-va-li | February |\\n| მარტი | mar-ti | March |\\n| აპრილი | ap-ri-li | April |\\n| მაისი | ma-i-si | May |\\n| ივნისი | iv-ni-si | June |\\n\\nExample: **15 მარტი 2025** = 15 March 2025\\n\\n## Cultural Note: Georgian Surnames\\n\\nGeorgian surnames have distinct masculine and feminine forms. Masculine surnames often end in **-ი** or **-ძე** (dzе, meaning \\\"son of\\\") or **-შვილი** (shvili, meaning \\\"child of\\\"). Feminine surnames often end in **-ა**. For example, the male surname **გელაშვილი** (Gelashvili) becomes **გელაშვილი** for females as well — though historically it was **გელაშვილა**. This makes Georgian names recognizable and grammatically systematic.\\n\\n## Practice Exercises\\n\\n:::exercise{id=\\\"ka-read-06-address-decode\\\" type=\\\"fill-in-blank\\\" title=\\\"Read the Address\\\" skill=\\\"text-decoding\\\" objectiveId=\\\"obj-read-06-read-addresses\\\"}\\n\\n**Question:** Read the address and answer the questions\\n\\nAddress: **თბილისი, რუსთაველის გამზირი, №8**\\n\\n1. What city is this in? ___\\n2. What is the street type? ___\\n3. What is the number? ___\\n\\n**Answer:**\\n\\n1. Tbilisi (თბილისი)\\n2. Avenue / Boulevard (გამზირი)\\n3. 8 (№8)\\n\\n**Explanation:** Georgian addresses follow the pattern: city, street name + type, number. თბილისი is Tbilisi, რუსთაველის is the genitive of the name Rustaveli, გამზირი means avenue.\\n\\n:::\\n\\n:::exercise{id=\\\"ka-read-06-form-vocab\\\" type=\\\"matching\\\" title=\\\"Form Fields\\\" skill=\\\"word-recognition\\\" objectiveId=\\\"obj-read-06-form-vocab\\\"}\\n\\n**Question:** Match each Georgian form field label to its English equivalent\\n\\n- სახელი\\n- გვარი\\n- მოქალაქეობა\\n- პასპორტი\\n- ელ-ფოსტა\\n\\n**Answer:**\\n\\n- სახელი → first name\\n- გვარი → surname\\n- მოქალაქეობა → citizenship / nationality\\n- პასპორტი → passport\\n- ელ-ფოსტა → email\\n\\n**Explanation:** სახელი literally means \\\"name.\\\" გვარი is the family name/surname. მოქალაქეობა comes from მოქალაქე (citizen). ელ-ფოსტა is a direct calque from \\\"electronic post.\\\"\\n\\n:::\\n\\n:::exercise{id=\\\"ka-read-06-document-comprehension\\\" type=\\\"multiple-choice\\\" title=\\\"Extract Information\\\" skill=\\\"reading-comprehension\\\" objectiveId=\\\"obj-read-06-document-comprehension\\\"}\\n\\n**Question:** On the hotel registration form, which field asks for your family name?\\n\\n**Options:**\\n- სახელი\\n- გვარი\\n- მოქალაქეობა\\n- ელ-ფოსტა\\n\\n**Answer:** 2\\n\\n**Explanation:** გვარი is the family name / surname. სახელი is the first/given name. This distinction matters on forms — putting your first name in the გვარი field and your surname in the სახელი field is a common mistake.\\n\\n:::\\n\\n## What's Next\\n\\nIn Lesson 7, you will practice reading short news-style headlines and text — a step up in reading complexity and vocabulary range.\\n\""],"names":["lesson06"],"mappings":"AAAA,MAAAA,IAAe;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;AAAA;"}
@@ -1,177 +0,0 @@
1
- const n = `---
2
- type: lesson
3
- id: georgian-alphabet-lesson-06
4
- title: "გაკვეთილი 6 — ხმოვანი თანხმოვნები"
5
- description: "Voiced Consonants: ბ გ დ ზ — Completing the three-way stop system with voiced stops and the fricative z"
6
- order: 6
7
- parentId: georgian-alphabet
8
- difficulty: beginner
9
- cefrLevel: A1
10
- categories:
11
- - consonants
12
- - voiced
13
- - basic-characters
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- metadata:
15
- estimatedTime: 25
16
- prerequisites:
17
- - georgian-alphabet-lesson-05
18
- learningObjectives:
19
- - id: obj-voiced-recognition
20
- description: "Recognize the voiced consonants ბ გ დ ზ"
21
- skill: character-recognition
22
- references: [bani, gani, doni, zeni]
23
- - id: obj-three-way-contrast
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- description: "Understand the three-way stop contrast: voiced, aspirated, and ejective"
25
- skill: character-sound-mapping
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- references: [bani, gani, doni]
27
- - id: obj-voiced-word-reading
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- description: "Read simple words using voiced consonants"
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- skill: word-recognition
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- references: [bani, gani, doni, zeni]
31
- ---
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-
33
- # გაკვეთილი 6 (Lesson 6) — Voiced Consonants
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-
35
- ## Introduction
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-
37
- Georgian has a remarkable **three-way distinction** among stop consonants that is rare among the world's languages. While English distinguishes only voiced and voiceless stops (b vs p), Georgian adds a third category: **ejective** stops. In this lesson, you learn the **voiced** members of this system, plus the voiced fricative ზ.
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-
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- ## The Three-Way Stop System
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-
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- Understanding this system is key to Georgian phonology:
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-
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- | Type | Lips (labial) | Tongue-tip (dental) | Back (velar) |
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- |------|---------------|---------------------|---------------|
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- | **Voiced** | ბ /b/ | დ /d/ | გ /g/ |
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- | **Aspirated** | ფ /pʰ/ | თ /tʰ/ | ქ /kʰ/ |
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- | **Ejective** | პ /pʼ/ | ტ /tʼ/ | კ /kʼ/ |
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-
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- - **Voiced**: Vocal cords vibrate during the sound (like English b, d, g)
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- - **Aspirated**: A puff of air follows the release (like English p, t, k at the start of a word)
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- - **Ejective**: The glottis closes, creating a sharp, popping sound (unique to Georgian and other Caucasian languages)
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-
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- ## Characters
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-
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- :::character-set{id="georgian-voiced-consonants" title="Voiced Consonants"}
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-
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- ::character{id="bani" canonicalRef="bani" char="ბ" name="ბ ბანი (Bani)" charType="consonant" data:phoneticCategory="stop" data:voicing="voiced" data:transliteration="b" data:ipa="b"}
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-
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- ::character{id="gani" canonicalRef="gani" char="გ" name="გ განი (Gani)" charType="consonant" data:phoneticCategory="stop" data:voicing="voiced" data:transliteration="g" data:ipa="ɡ"}
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-
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- ::character{id="doni" canonicalRef="doni" char="დ" name="დ დონი (Doni)" charType="consonant" data:phoneticCategory="stop" data:voicing="voiced" data:transliteration="d" data:ipa="d"}
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-
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- ::character{id="zeni" canonicalRef="zeni" char="ზ" name="ზ ზენი (Zeni)" charType="consonant" data:phoneticCategory="fricative" data:voicing="voiced" data:transliteration="z" data:ipa="z"}
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-
65
- :::
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-
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- ## Pronunciation Guide
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-
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- ### ბ (Bani) - /b/
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-
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- Pronounced like English "b" in "boy." This is the voiced counterpart to aspirated ფ and ejective პ. Place your hand on your throat while saying it and you should feel vibration.
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-
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- ### გ (Gani) - /g/
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-
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- Pronounced like English "g" in "go." The voiced counterpart to aspirated ქ and ejective კ. This is a velar stop produced at the back of the mouth.
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-
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- ### დ (Doni) - /d/
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-
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- Pronounced like English "d" in "do." The voiced counterpart to aspirated თ and ejective ტ. Georgian dental stops are produced with the tongue touching the teeth, slightly more forward than English.
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-
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- ### ზ (Zeni) - /z/
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-
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- Pronounced like English "z" in "zoo." This is a voiced alveolar fricative. Unlike the stops above, ზ does not have a three-way contrast; it pairs only with its voiceless counterpart ს.
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-
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- ## Practice Words
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-
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- | Word | Transliteration | Meaning | Notes |
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- |------|----------------|---------|-------|
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- | ბაგა | baga | garden | Uses ბ with vowels |
90
- | გარი | gari | gari | Uses გ with vowels |
91
- | დილა | dila | morning | Common greeting word |
92
- | ზამა | zama | zama | Uses ზ with vowels |
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-
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- ## Recognizing the Shapes
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-
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- Each Mkhedruli letter has a distinctive shape:
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-
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- - **ბ** has a rounded body with a descending stroke
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- - **გ** features a curved hook shape
100
- - **დ** has a compact, rounded form
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- - **ზ** has a distinctive zigzag-like stroke
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-
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- Practice tracing each letter to build muscle memory for recognition.
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-
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- ## Key Points
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-
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- 1. **Three-way contrast**: Georgian stops come in voiced/aspirated/ejective triples
108
- 2. **Voiced = vibration**: Feel your throat vibrate for ბ, გ, დ, ზ
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- 3. **ზ is a fricative**: It pairs with voiceless ს rather than fitting the three-way stop pattern
110
- 4. **Dental articulation**: Georgian dental sounds are produced slightly more forward than English
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-
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- ## Practice Exercises
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-
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- :::exercise{id="voiced-recognition-06" type="matching" title="Voiced Consonant Recognition" skill="character-recognition" tests="bani,gani,doni,zeni" objectiveId="obj-voiced-recognition"}
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-
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- **Question:** Match each Georgian letter to its transliteration
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-
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- - ბ
119
- - გ
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- - დ
121
- - ზ
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-
123
- **Answer:**
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-
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- - b (Bani) - voiced bilabial stop
126
- - g (Gani) - voiced velar stop
127
- - d (Doni) - voiced dental stop
128
- - z (Zeni) - voiced alveolar fricative
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-
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- **Explanation:** These four consonants are all voiced, meaning the vocal cords vibrate during their production. The first three are stops (complete closure of airflow) while ზ is a fricative (partial obstruction).
131
-
132
- :::
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-
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- :::exercise{id="three-way-contrast-06" type="multiple-choice" title="Three-Way Stop Contrast" skill="character-sound-mapping" tests="bani,gani,doni" objectiveId="obj-three-way-contrast"}
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-
136
- **Question:** Georgian has a three-way distinction among stop consonants. Which set correctly shows the voiced, aspirated, and ejective labial stops?
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-
138
- **Options:**
139
- - ბ (voiced), ფ (aspirated), პ (ejective)
140
- - ბ (voiced), პ (aspirated), ფ (ejective)
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- - ფ (voiced), ბ (aspirated), პ (ejective)
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- - პ (voiced), ფ (aspirated), ბ (ejective)
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-
144
- **Answer:** 1
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-
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- **Explanation:** The three-way labial stop system is: ბ /b/ (voiced, vocal cords vibrate), ფ /pʰ/ (aspirated, puff of air), პ /pʼ/ (ejective, glottal closure). This same pattern repeats for dental (დ/თ/ტ) and velar (გ/ქ/კ) stops.
147
-
148
- :::
149
-
150
- :::exercise{id="voiced-word-reading-06" type="fill-in-blank" title="Simple Word Reading" skill="word-recognition" tests="bani,gani,doni,zeni" objectiveId="obj-voiced-word-reading"}
151
-
152
- **Question:** Read each word and identify the voiced consonant it begins with
153
-
154
- - ბაგა (baga - garden)
155
- - გარი (gari)
156
- - დილა (dila - morning)
157
- - ზამა (zama)
158
-
159
- **Answer:**
160
-
161
- - ბ (Bani, /b/) - voiced bilabial stop
162
- - გ (Gani, /g/) - voiced velar stop
163
- - დ (Doni, /d/) - voiced dental stop
164
- - ზ (Zeni, /z/) - voiced alveolar fricative
165
-
166
- **Explanation:** Each word begins with a voiced consonant. Practice reading these words aloud, paying attention to the vibration of your vocal cords on the initial consonant.
167
-
168
- :::
169
-
170
- ## What's Next
171
-
172
- In Lesson 7, you'll learn the sibilant fricative შ and the aspirated affricates ც and ჩ, expanding your knowledge of Georgian's rich consonant system.
173
- `;
174
- export {
175
- n as default
176
- };
177
- //# sourceMappingURL=lesson-06-DcGxfTbB.js.map