Naro
ǁxai ǁxai ǀgui ǂʼa nǀʼam nǁʼa ǀʼan. ǀʼan ǀgui nǁʼa nǀʼam, ǁxai ǁxai ǀgui nǀʼam ǀʼa. ǀʼan ǀgui nǁʼa nǀʼam ǃʼha, ǁxai ǁxai ǀgui ǀʼa ǃʼha. ǀʼan ǀgui nǁʼa nǀʼam ǃʼha ǂʼa, ǁxai ǁxai ǀgui nǀʼam ǀʼan ǂʼa. ǁxai ǁxai ǀgui ǂʼa nǁʼa ǀʼan. ǀʼan ǀgui nǁʼa nǀʼam, ǁxai ǁxai ǀgui nǁʼa nǀʼam. ǀʼam ǀgui nǁʼa nǀʼam, ǀʼan ǀgui nǁʼa nǀʼam, ǁxai ǁxai ǀgui ǀʼan ǂʼa.
Instrumental
Why Do Shadows Move?
Shadows move because the Sun moves across the sky. In the morning, the Sun is low, so shadows are long. As the Sun rises higher, shadows become shorter. In the afternoon, the Sun moves lower again, and shadows grow longer in the opposite direction. Shadows do not move on their own — they change because the light source changes position. The Earth is turning, the Sun appears to move, and shadows quietly follow the light.