Everyday Kai / unit 5 / lesson 5

Everyday Unit 05: Health, Symptoms, Safety, Emergency, and Care

Learn practical Everyday Kai for health status, symptoms, pain, wounds, urgent care, safety warnings, clinic needs, and care coordination.

name date score

vocabulary

  • ma
  • sai
  • sha
  • ya
  • yano
  • yava
  • yari
  • mi
  • ti
  • si
  • nai
  • tio
  • sio
  • e
  • el
  • an
  • or
  • li
  • na
  • en
  • al
  • te
  • rine
  • rinan
  • niva
  • nive
  • nivo
  • nivu
  • savi
  • savu
  • noro
  • nuni
  • nuno
  • sanu
  • sani
  • sano
  • sane
  • sanai
  • sannoa
  • sanyare
  • sanmire
  • elen
  • santelo
  • nulo
  • momo
  • mome
  • momi
  • muno
  • tavu
  • maro
  • tiro
  • tire
  • hai
  • haia
  • hune
  • huno
  • some
  • somo
  • silu
  • hile
  • hole
  • mile
  • teeli
  • aeli
  • ela
  • milo

grammar

  • direct health status
  • symptoms as en phrases
  • pain and wound reporting
  • urgent need with el nive rine
  • safety commands with ma and ma sha
  • clinic and doctor requests
  • care coordination
  • avoiding poetic language in emergencies

practice types

  • symptom reporting
  • emergency phrases
  • clinic dialogue
  • safety instructions
  • care coordination
  • translation
  • role-play
  • answer key

learner boundary

Common Kai first

This site teaches ordinary Common Kai before sacred, symbolic, or Lumin work. Beginners should keep Sacred Kai as later specialist material until the plain sentence is stable.

  • Find the practical Common Kai meaning.
  • Say who or what is acting, needing, asking, or being described.
  • Open sacred, poetic, or Lumin notes only after the plain reading is clear.

spaced review

grammar return practice

19 patterns due

Start here before the new lesson work. These earlier patterns are deliberately returning in a later lesson.

third later lesson / from unit 2 / lesson 2

Everyday Unit 02: Travel, Directions, Plans, Schedules, and Appointments

Mix this pattern with the current lesson's main form so retrieval happens in a new context.

  • appointments as planned meetings
  • asking where and when
  • direction with li
  • location with en
  • permission with vari
  • plan questions with mino
  • route with al
  • schedule and time-point phrases
  • source with na
  • wait and stay instructions
next lesson / from unit 4 / lesson 4

Everyday Unit 04: Work, Money, Services, Buying, and Asking for Help

Before new material, explain the older pattern aloud and write one fresh Kai sentence with it.

  • asking with yale
  • exchange with mone and mono
  • fair exchange with monkai
  • help requests with ma nive
  • practical service requests
  • price questions with yave
  • task possession with te
  • work completion with or
  • work status with el kame

practice sheet

write your answers

  1. Translate: Mi e sani.
  2. Translate: Mi e sanu.
  3. Translate: Sanu en mi.
  4. Translate: Nuno en mi.
  5. Translate: Momo en mi.
  6. Translate: Muno en mi.
  7. Translate: Mi el nive sano.
  8. Translate: Mi el nive sanmire elen.
  9. Translate: Sannoa en yava?
  10. Translate: Nivu en tio.
  11. Translate: Noro en tio.
  12. Translate: Ma hile li nive.
  13. Translate: Ma sha hune tio.
  14. Translate: Ma hole en tio.
  15. Translate: Ti el sanyare ya?
  16. Fill the blank: Mi e ___. = I am ill.
  17. Fill the blank: Mi el nive ___. = I need medicine.
  18. Fill the blank: Mi el nive sanmire ___. = I need a doctor.
  19. Fill the blank: ___ en mi. = I have pain.
  20. Fill the blank: ___ en tio. = Emergency is here.
  21. Fill the blank: Ma ___ li nive. = Call for help.
  22. Fill the blank: Ma sha ___ tio. = Do not drink this.
  23. Write in Kai: I am well.
  24. Write in Kai: I am ill.
  25. Write in Kai: I have a symptom.
  26. Write in Kai: I have a wound.
  27. Write in Kai: I need a clinic.
  28. Write in Kai: I need a doctor now.
  29. Write in Kai: Where is the clinic?
  30. Write in Kai: This is urgent.
  31. Write in Kai: Be careful.
  32. Write in Kai: Stay together.
  33. Write in Kai: The child needs medicine.
  34. Write in Kai: My friend is ill. They need a clinic.
  35. Write an eight-line emergency or clinic dialogue using one symptom, one urgent need, one safety instruction, and one care coordination sentence.