two invented languages, kurtish and laeglish, both obey principles of vowel harmony within words, though in different ways. in both languages, the five vowels (a, e, i, o, and u) are classified as either brutish (a, o, and u) or fragile (e and i). in kurtish, every word is classified as either brutish or fragile, according to the vowels that word contains (and no words contain both types of vowel). for instance, the word taogh is brutish, because a and o are brutish. in laeglish, by contrast, a word can contain both types of vowel, but the two types of vowel cannot be adjacent to one another. they must be separated by consonants (non-vowel letters), as in the word soughie, in which the brutish o and u are separated from the fragile i and e by the consonants g and h. in the first column, select a word that, according to the constraints given, could be in the laeglish language, but not kurtish. in the second column, select a word that is not permissible in either language. make only two selections, one in each column.



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