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It is the first line of a poem and it reads Seasagi suas, stand up and lets walk

2006-06-29 13:46:14 · 3 answers · asked by golfergirl 1 in Society & Culture Mythology & Folklore

3 answers

'Seas' is the transitive verb; 'to stand' and 'Suas' is 'up'. When addressing more than one person Seasaigí is the form used.

So 'Seasaigí suas' is the next two words in the first line of the poem; Stand up!

Pronunciation: Seasaigí suas - shass-agi sue-as (last word with two S's.) It gets bleeped out when I type it, but it is truer to the pronunciation.

2006-07-03 08:12:31 · answer #1 · answered by alpha 7 · 0 0

I have a partial meaning. Suas means "upward" or "to go up", which makes sense in light of the following words, "stand up and let's walk".

The word Seasagi may be a person's name, because there is no translation according to my source.

2006-06-29 23:23:24 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it sounds beautiful

2006-06-30 12:57:57 · answer #3 · answered by ladyofthehollow 7 · 0 0

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