Ye're a fierce trim, ay, that's clear, but this time you're outmatched.
2
I think that much sorrow draws near this land; ay, and others.
3
This is the way it will ay be, all my life long.
4
The old, ay, perhaps the most common lesson of life, is disappointment.
5
Now of a sudden came friends and flattery, ay, and love itself.
Uso de aymara em inglês
1
Bolivia's economy grew and thousands of Aymara peasants moved to El Alto.
2
The once marginalized indigenous Aymara, to which he belongs, have particularly benefited.
3
Some blame Aymara and other highland settlers, soy farmers and cattle ranchers.
4
The solstice coincides with the Aymara Indian New Year.
5
In the south, Aymara is chiefly spoken; but further north, Quechua is the commoner language.
6
However, many of the Aymara are split over Morales.
7
Many Aymara have flourished under Morales' rule.
8
Except for one justice -Cusi, the fellow Aymara who at that time sat on the court.
9
An Aymara woman participates in a march near Trinidad, Bolivia August 15, 2011.
10
Aymara ponco, meaning a door.
11
I could hear a lively din of toasts and conversations in both Spanish and the indigenous Andean language of Aymara.
12
In Aymara and Quechua.
13
Urury, like most residents of Carancas, is part of the indigenous Aymara nation, a group that has lived here for centuries.
14
Last March The Observer met Quispe, one of Bolivia's most influential Indian leaders, who is known to his Aymara supporters as 'The Condor'.
15
The outright victory of Evo Morales, a 45-year-old Aymara indigenous Indian, in Bolivia's presidential election is a historic event in Latin America's politics.
16
Morales' most fervent supporters are the previously marginalized Aymara and rural Bolivians, who have seen their power, influence and wealth increase under his administration.