Sacred Kai and Lumin / unit 6 / lesson 6
Sacred Kai Capstone: Compose a Vow, Name, or Short Chant with Commentary
Complete Sacred Kai and Lumin with a scored capstone: compose a vow, name/seal entry, or short chant with Common Kai framing, Lumin notes, plain reading, inner reading, safety notes, and revision.
vocabulary
grammar
practice types
learner boundary
Common Kai first
Sacred Kai, Lumin, vows, seals, chants, and name commentary are specialist layers. Every sacred line should have a plain Common Kai restatement before any inner reading or symbolic interpretation.
- Give a plain Common Kai restatement.
- Separate public meaning from private or symbolic resonance.
- Never use sacred wording to hide uncertainty or avoid a practical answer.
spaced review
grammar return practice
Start here before the new lesson work. These earlier patterns are deliberately returning in a later lesson.
Sacred Unit 02: Kai, Kaiven, Ve, Ra-ai, Vow Language, and Inner Readings
Use the pattern in the review, assessment, project, or capstone evidence for this course.
- avoiding legal and medical ambiguity
- Common Kai frame for vows
- kai as source-love and creative coherence
- kaiven as sixfold love-field
- ma as blessing
- ra as timeless claim
- sacred formula commentary
- sacred root interpretation
- ve as six and complete chord
- ven as sixfold field
- vow language with lankai and kontao
Sacred Unit 03: Name-Making, Root Resonance, Vowel Paths, and Character Names
Mix this pattern with the current lesson's main form so retrieval happens in a new context.
- avoiding false etymology
- avoiding sacred names as brand labels
- character name annotation
- identity before symbolism
- loan names versus Kai-root names
- name-making workflow
- pronunciation and Lumin LA-1 notes
- register labels for names
- root resonance as commentary not grammar
- source relation action inner manifest depth and beyond readings
- vowel path interpretation
Sacred Unit 04: Lumin Reading Basics and Roman-to-Lumin Analysis
Use the pattern in the review, assessment, project, or capstone evidence for this course.
- allowed onsets vowels and codas
- final n l r m marks
- LA-1 encoding
- Lumin syllable anatomy
- Lumin-to-Roman recovery
- no-coda syllables with 0 coda
- punctuation overview
- Roman-to-Lumin syllable analysis
- sacred pause with vertical bar
- seal boundary
- seed aura and final mark order
- validation rule for recoverability
- vowel-initial syllables with 0 onset
- word chains with hyphen
Sacred Unit 05: Seals, Chants, Poetic Compression, and Safe Translation Notes
Before new material, explain the older pattern aloud and write one fresh Kai sentence with it.
- analytic spelling before seal form
- call and response with lune and sailune
- chant structure
- expansion back to Common Kai
- four-layer sacred translation
- Lumin recoverability
- poetic compression
- ra-ai closure discipline
- register repair
- repetition and parallelism
- root order and vowel aura preservation
- safety legal medical and technical warnings
- seal entry workflow
practice sheet
write your answers
A. Choose a Track
Choose one track and answer the project brief.
- Track A: vow.
- Track B: name or seal.
- Track C: short chant.
B. Draft the Artifact
Write the artifact for your chosen track.
- If vow: write 4-6 Kai lines or a framed vow formula.
- If name/seal: write a complete entry with Roman spelling and source/roots.
- If chant: write 3-6 spoken lines with speaker/response frames.
C. Add Required Commentary
Add these layers.
- Plain reading.
- Grammar note.
- Root/source note.
- Lumin note or "not used."
- Register note.
- Inner reading.
- Safety note.
D. Revise
Make at least five revisions.
- One revision for grammar clarity.
- One revision for register framing.
- One revision for root/source accuracy.
- One revision for Lumin or seal recoverability, if used.
- One revision for safety or domain boundary.
E. Score
- Score the project out of 100 with the rubric.
- Write two sentences explaining the weakest area and the next revision.