Wirrakinyanda Kolety-watan kiluwity.
I will swim across the Edward River today.
Pronunciation:
Say: wiirr-ah-kiny-ahnd-ah kol-ety-waht-ahn kil-uu-wity.

Notes:
Vowels: Standard - ‘i’ as in ‘hit’, 'u' as in 'put', 'a' as in ‘path’ or ‘car’, 'o' as in ‘on’,  'e' as in ‘bed’.
Consonant combination - 'ny' (palato-nasal) combine 'n' and 'y' while top of tongue touches hard palate plus nasal vibration. (Avoid the English 'nee' as in 'many'), - 'ty' (palatal stop) - combine 't' and 'y' while tip and blade of tongue touches hard palate and stops the breath. (Note: 'tch' is close but different to 'ty'.)  (Avoid the English 'tee' as in 'city'.), - 'rr' roll or trill tongue.
Literal Meaning:
Lit. swim-will-I Edward River across today.
Shows:
Adverb, Verb ending - I do - anda, Verb ending - will happen - iny, Verb head-word, Noun ending - across - watan
Explanation:
Wamba Wamba sentence beginning with the verb 'wirraka' (to swim) plus the future tense ending 'iny' and the person ending 'anda' (I). Followed by the noun postposition combination 'Kolety-watan' (Edward R.-across). Sentence ends with the adverb of time 'kiluwity' (today). (Hercus noted that the non-transferring adverbs of time were usually last in a sentence.)
Learning Focus:
Communication, Grammar, Language Building, Socialising
Learning Exercise:
Sentence is a good example of adding the post-position '-watan' to communicate 'across something'. It can me added to the end of English words as well.
Look up, write down and practice saying the Wamba Wamba for 'across the lagoon', 'across the Murray', 'across the brown snake'. 
Translate this sentence into English - 'Wekuwinbula oval-watan tyelik-tyelik.' (Clue - what does 'wekuwa' mean?)
Phrase Sentence:
Sentence
Words Associated:
-watan - across
kiluwity - today
Kolety - name of the Edward River
wirraka - to swim
Topics:
Activities, Activities - Moving, Activities - Playing, Communication
Age Guides:
Advanced, Yr 10-12, Yr 7-9
Reference:
WWDict. Hercus, p 74, Pospositions - watan. VLaLS, Hercus, p47, 2.3.3 Uninflected words, adverbs of time.