Milestone: how far you've come
Still nothing new — but this one's bigger. The every-fifth recaps look back over the last four lessons. This is a milestone review: a step back to take in the whole road from Lesson 1, twenty-five lessons of it. No new words — just proof of how much is already yours.
Think about where you started: one phrase, mi ama tu. Look at the conversation in section
2 now and notice you can simply read it. That's the distance you've covered.
1 · Quick-fire — the whole road
These reach all the way back, not just to recent lessons. Say each in Amatu before you peek — answers in Check yourself at the bottom.
- I love you
- Goodnight
- I want this
- Please help me
- I'm so happy
- My mother
- Thanks
- What's your name?
- You're welcome (heartfelt)
2 · A longer conversation
More lines than a usual recap — a whole little visit, drawing on lessons from across the track. Read it through and make sure each line lands before you check the translation:
—
aiya, yari de mi! mi oli.—aiya! mi ori tu — nalu!—tu namu li shu?—mi namu li Mira. tu namu li shu?—mi namu li Joel. iya de tu pai?—da, la pai. mi shan we tu.—mi fia yala — sa dona ta.—okei. mi tika ta to tu. dana!—no to. mi vanu — somi pai.
3 · Read this
A few lines, all in words you've held since earlier lessons. Work out the meaning, then check yourself:
aiya, nara! mi ori tu, mi nawa tu.tu kena, mi vo: omo de mi li pai.mi sen ta — mi shan we la. mi vanu, somi pai.
🎯 Pro tip Don't grade yourself on perfection here — grade yourself on coverage. A phrase that needed no thought is a phrase that's truly yours. A phrase you had to reconstruct is just one that wants another night or two. Both are fine; this is a map, not an exam.
4 · Your turn
Out loud, or written if you have the means: say two or three true things about your life right now — your people, how you feel, what you'd ask a friend — using only words you already know. Stitch them into something you'd actually say. A few wells to draw from:
- Who's in your life →
iya de mi/pita de mi/omo de mi/yari de mi - Ask and answer →
tu namu li shu?/mi namu li …/mi kena tu - Give and take →
mi dona ta to tu/mi tika ta/sa yuva mi - How you feel, what you do →
mi oli/mi ori …/mi shan we …/mi ama …
There's no answer key for this — it's yours, and it's the whole point of the other twenty-five lessons. The only rule is that it be true.
5 · Check yourself
Answers — click to reveal
Quick-fire:
- I love you →
mi ama tu - Goodnight →
somi pai - I want this →
mi fia ni - Please help me →
sa yuva mi - I'm so happy →
mi oli - My mother →
iya de mi - Thanks →
dana - What's your name? →
tu namu li shu? - You're welcome (heartfelt) →
mi oli to tu
The longer conversation:
— Hello, my friend! I'm happy. — Hello! I see you — wow! — What's your name? — My name is Mira. What's your name? — My name is Joel. Is your mother well? — Yes, she's well. I'm glad to be with you. — I'd like water — please give it. — Okay. I take it from you. Thanks! — You're welcome. I'm off — goodnight.
Read this:
Hello, people! I see you, I hear you. You ask, I say: my child is well. I know it — I'm glad to be with her. I'm off, goodnight.
Twenty-five lessons stand behind you, five minutes at a time — a real foothold in a real language. From here the track keeps growing: more words, longer thoughts, and the small joiners that string everything you know into bigger sentences. One night at a time.
⬅️ Back: Lesson 25 — Recap · ➡️ Next: Lesson 27 — Now and today
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