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#123347 06/11/2005 9:32 AM
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>hey, didn't know you spoke Welsh!

Does anybody?


#123348 06/11/2005 5:21 PM
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Are you taking the epistemology?


#123349 06/11/2005 10:09 PM
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#123350 06/13/2005 10:26 PM
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For all interested in the languages of that region, this might be an interesting set of resources:

http://dsal.uchicago.edu/dictionaries/

edit: and this is quite cool too:
http://dsal.uchicago.edu/reference/gazetteer/
~ a searchable copy of The Imperial Gazetteer of India
Hunter, William Wilson, Sir, 1840-1900
Cotton, James Sutherland, 1847-1918 ed.
Burn, Richard, Sir, 1871-1947 joint ed.
Meyer, William Stevenson, Sir, 1860-1922. joint ed.
....................................
New edition, published under the authority of His Majesty's secretary of state for India in council.
Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1908-1931 [v. 1, 1909]




~ with a nod to languagelog's quote of Dick & Garlick's blog:
http://dickandgarlick.blogspot.com/2005/06/burgers-bun-kababs.html


#123351 06/13/2005 10:36 PM
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Thanks, mav. I had the hobson-jobson from that that list but the Dick & Garlick's page was new to me. Now if I ever get to visit family in Pakistan, I can de-burgerise my speech to fit in.


#123352 06/13/2005 10:59 PM
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Anyone tried this site? - it looks to be clean and effective on first trial...

http://www.worldlingo.com/en/products_services/worldlingo_translator.html


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If you ever wonder about the mix of leaves in the Tossed Salad of A, here's the tool to tell you in case you haven't seen this before:

http://www.mla.org/census_map


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the tool

"I'm sorry, Dave, but I'm afraid I can't write software that will communicate with your browser."


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> browser

woiked fine for me?



formerly known as etaoin...
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I mighta made it all the way through life without knowing that there are 446 Navajo language speakers in the State of Washington. In that it is a long way from here to where the Navajo language is commonly spoken, one wonders as to the rest of this story.


#123357 06/14/2005 9:53 PM
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The Navajo came to the Arizona/New Mexico region some time around 1100 AD from somewhere in California, but their language is a member of the Athebaskan language group that is mostly represented by languages in the Pacific Northwest. Navajo and Apache are pretty much mutually comprehensible. Whether other Athebaskan languages share this trait with Navajo and Apache I don't know.


#123358 06/15/2005 5:03 AM
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Lyle Campbell, American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.

Ives Goddard (Ed.), Languages, vol. 17, Handbook of North American Indians, Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 1996.

Marianne Mithun, The Languages of Native North America, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.



#123359 08/02/2005 9:05 PM
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Huge list for archaic/Shakespearian/poetical words:

http://www.geocities.com/poeminister/dictionary

Last edited by Logwood; 11/15/2005 12:54 PM.
#123360 09/22/2005 12:14 AM
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inselpeter #182851 02/23/2009 1:43 PM
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New edition of UNESCO’s Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
language map Here are languages and dialects most unheard of (by me anyway).

Endagered Languages World-map (long pdf download )really nice to zoom in on it. (immo)

BranShea #182867 02/23/2009 9:57 PM
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This map holds a wealth of info. So many languages left with
only one or two persons speaking it. Makes me want to take
one on if only to preserve it.


----please, draw me a sheep----
LukeJavan8 #182870 02/23/2009 10:37 PM
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According to the newspaper article that brought me to this site, languagediversity is to culture what biodiversity is to nature.
On the list of countries counting the most endangered languages
India is on top (196), followed by the United States (192) and Indonesia (147). The last speaker of Eyak, a language of Alaska died last year. So, you have the choice of 192 U.S. languages if you want to take one on. Which will it be? In my area I could choose Ripuarisch frown , a language spoken in Rhineland.

BranShea #182890 02/24/2009 5:38 PM
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We had a newspaper article yesterday that pertains to this
topic.
According to the article, only one native speaker of Livonian
remains on Earth, in Latvia. Eyak, an Alaskan language, died
last year with its last speaker.
These are two of nearly 2000 that UNESCO says have gone extinct
or in danger of doing so.
With each language being a vessel of culture, a repository for
a unique set of feelings, expressions, wisdoms, ways of looking
at the world, it is worth preserving.
According to the article, in the USA alone more than a fourth
of the 192 languages once spoken have disappeared; 71 are
severely endangered, e.g., Gros Ventre (fewer than 10); Menomonee
(35 speakers).
Livonian is being revived by being taught in schools to young
peole in Latvia and thru poetry.
Sort of makes one want to learn one to help the cause along..


----please, draw me a sheep----
LukeJavan8 #182905 02/24/2009 9:59 PM
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Kurdish
Some languages are endagered because they are banned.

AnnaStrophic #184485 04/25/2009 9:16 AM
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Hi,

This is a wonderful opinion. The things mentioned are unanimous and needs to be appreciated by everyone.

robinson





Last edited by Jackie; 04/29/2009 2:30 AM. Reason: We don't like spam a lot.
robinson23 #184486 04/25/2009 11:58 AM
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If we had spam, we could have spam and eggs, if we had eggs. But wait... All we need is the eggs now.

BranShea #184501 04/26/2009 2:39 AM
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Originally Posted By: BranShea
Kurdish
Some languages are endagered because they are banned.


Many, many, Native American languages were banned by Christian Missionary Schools on reservations and in native villages as the 'savages' were 'saved', leading thus to their dying out.


----please, draw me a sheep----
LukeJavan8 #184611 05/02/2009 11:28 PM
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I love astronomy, and I understand from another poster to this
site (AWAD)that some of you may also be interested. I go to
this site daily, and love it, so I offer it, to whomever
may be interested:

http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html

And thanks to the "other" poster for the suggestion. This
person understand my hesitancy at times, but it was a good
suggestion if others may benefit. I have learned here a lot
of things and wish I could offer more.

Last edited by LukeJavan8; 05/03/2009 1:36 AM.

----please, draw me a sheep----
LukeJavan8 #184628 05/03/2009 5:17 PM
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Nice this site, Lukejavan8. A daily trip to heaven can't do any harm. Really astonishing beautiful photos and also useful as a language link. Many uncommon (to me anyway) words to learn + anecdotes such as the
Charles II part in the spam thread. Thanks!

BranShea #184639 05/04/2009 11:15 AM
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Ah, the APOD.
On my corporate computer I have three Internet links in the Windows 'Startup' group that automatically start my day;
AWAD
APOD
The Daily WTF

Last edited by ParkinT; 05/04/2009 11:16 AM.

"I am certain there is too much certainty in the world" -Michael Crichton
ParkinT #184653 05/05/2009 7:36 AM
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Well, there's things we cannot say in words, so we have images. There are things we cannot say with images, that's why we have words. And there are things we can say in neither images nor words, that's why we have music.
But I'm sure the first thing I'm gonna see when I will die is this Whale Galaxy : link Cause I have no words for the beauty of it.

BranShea #184656 05/05/2009 12:15 PM
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Amen.
And the mind-boggling thing is that each of those simple points of colored light might represent an entire solar system like ours. I cannot perceive of infinity. I thought it would be easier if I break down the problem. So, I am contemplating half of infinity!


"I am certain there is too much certainty in the world" -Michael Crichton
BranShea #184666 05/05/2009 5:51 PM
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That is beautiful! But they provided a humpback whale image link, and it's really not like a humpback; it resembles almost perfectly a Minke: Minke whale I have seen Minkes, but not much of them, as they are shy and not prone to breaching often. Humpbacks are fascinating and beautiful. I have been as close as about 10 feet from one as it dove shallowly underneath the boat, its "wings" spread out wide. So huge and mighty, yet so gentle... :0)

twosleepy #184667 05/05/2009 6:28 PM
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Wooh! Never saw that one before, what a streamlined snout. I went after minke: allegedly this:

Quote: Minke; Also called minke whale, lesser rorqual.

Origin:
1930–35; < Norw minkehval, allegedly after a crew member of the Norwegian whaling pioneer Svend Foyn (1809–94), named Meincke, who mistook a pod of minkes for blue whales.

from dictionary.com)

Faldage #184675 05/06/2009 2:13 AM
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Originally Posted By: Faldage
If we had spam, we could have spam and eggs, if we had eggs. But wait... All we need is the eggs now.


It depends. Are you writing about Spam or spam? I had Spam and eggs just the other day.

During World War II, my dad survived on Spam while serving in the South Pacific. The only fresh meat they had was Australian sheep that came frozen in the entire carcass. He said that they looked so much like dogs that he could not get his mind past the obstacle so turned to Spam almost exclusively.

LukeJavan8 #184676 05/06/2009 2:18 AM
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Originally Posted By: LukeJavan8
Originally Posted By: BranShea
Kurdish
Some languages are endagered because they are banned.


Many, many, Native American languages were banned by Christian Missionary Schools on reservations and in native villages as the 'savages' were 'saved', leading thus to their dying out.


I think you are only half correct. The missionaries could certainly ban the use of their students native languages in their schools; but they could hardly ban them on the reservations. That would have taken the collusion of the Federal Indian Agents.

I have a friend and former seminary classmate who is a missionary to Indians in the Pacific Northwest today and the mission with which he is associated is doing as much as it can to maintain the native languages of the tribes to which they minister.

PastorVon #184680 05/06/2009 11:47 AM
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If I read this sentence correctly :
"Many, many, Native American languages were banned by Christian Missionary Schools on reservations and in native villages as the 'savages' were 'saved', leading thus to their dying out." _ it says exactly the same thing you say.

NB. It says by schools on reservations and in villages, not just on reservations and in villages.

twosleepy #184716 05/10/2009 4:51 PM
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Originally Posted By: twosleepy
That is beautiful! But they provided a humpback whale image link, and it's really not like a humpback; it resembles almost perfectly a Minke: Minke whale I have seen Minkes, but not much of them, as they are shy and not prone to breaching often. Humpbacks are fascinating and beautiful. I have been as close as about 10 feet from one as it dove shallowly underneath the boat, its "wings" spread out wide. So huge and mighty, yet so gentle... :0)



Absolutely magnificent. Thanks for sharing.


----please, draw me a sheep----
BranShea #184717 05/10/2009 4:54 PM
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Originally Posted By: BranShea
If I read this sentence correctly :
"Many, many, Native American languages were banned by Christian Missionary Schools on reservations and in native villages as the 'savages' were 'saved', leading thus to their dying out." _ it says exactly the same thing you say.

NB. It says by schools on reservations and in villages, not just on reservations and in villages.


That is correct. Not only on reservations. Sorry for the cynicism, but it roils my native American blood
to have had our children forcibly Christianized and "civilized" and Americanized. And I am only part
Native American. Forcibly taking whole tribes to a river and "baptizing' them without any idea of what
was going on (cf movie: "Mission"). Don't want to start a fight here, just expressing an opinion.


----please, draw me a sheep----
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Hello, all. As a language coach in Paris, some of you might be interested in the language and cross-cultural notes on my blog.

Regards to all at Wordsmith!

http://www.paris-savannah.com

#193606 10/23/2010 1:53 PM
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Shove your stuff.

BranShea #193609 10/23/2010 5:07 PM
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That post has been reported and will be taken care of.

Faldage #193610 10/23/2010 5:29 PM
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Very good, still it felt good to say that. Very good.

BranShea #193611 10/23/2010 6:03 PM
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still it felt good to say that.

I applauded your command of the idiom. (Or is it the same in Dutch?)


Ceci n'est pas un seing.
Faldage #193612 10/23/2010 8:22 PM
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Originally Posted By: Faldage
That post has been reported and will be taken care of.


and can one assume that monclerr112 has been reported for numerous transgressions, as well?!

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