- LISTToday, May 11th 8:22am
Timeline Photos
Por si te lo perdiste: Mujer nada con tiburones blancos para cortometraje. http://ow.ly/kUJwLTRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY
- A LISTToday, May 11th 8:21am
Timeline Photos
Condenan a 80 años de prisión al exdictador de Guatemala | Conoce por qué: http://end.pr/ZUZ8OhTRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:21am
Meet The New Playboy Playmate Of The Year
www.huffingtonpost.ca
Hugh Hefner's wife Crystal Harris better move over –there’s a new Playmate in the house! Raquel Pomplun was named 2013's Playboy Playmate of the Year at the unveiling of the adult magazine's June issue at the Playboy Mansion on May 9 in Beverly Hills.TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:21amTRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY
- TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY
- A LISTToday, May 11th 8:20am
Former Guatemalan Dictator Found Guilty Of Genocide : NPR
www.npr.org
The genocide trial of former Guatemalan dictator Efrain Rios Montt ended Friday with a conviction. A panel of judges found him guilty after a six-week proceeding. Rios Montt, however, denies responsibility for massacres and other crimes committed against Mayans during his 1982-1983 rule.TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:19am
Timeline Photos
Gobernador firma el primer Convenio Colectivo de su administración. http://ow.ly/kVgm5TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:19am
LISTEN: 17 Memorable Spanish Songs For Mother's Day
www.huffingtonpost.com
On this special Mother's Day, besides offering all your love and affection to mom, if you feel you are short on words, why not dedicate to her a song in Spanish that could talk to her heart in her own native language.TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:19am
West., Tex., E.M.T. Faces Charges of Having Bomb Parts
www.nytimes.com
Officials would not say whether the case was related to a deadly fertilizer plant explosion last month, but they opened a criminal inquiry.TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:18amTRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY
Timeline Photos
En portada: El fiscal puertorriqueño Víctor Pérez, quien está a cargo del caso contra Ariel Castro, dice que las acciones del presunto secuestrador de tres mujeres han afectado la imagen de los boricuas.TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY- TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY
- A LISTToday, May 11th 8:17am
Timeline Photos
Justicia para Guatemala. Ríos Montt sentenced to 80 years in prison for genocide and crimes against humanity.
Our photo worldTRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:17am
Timeline Photos
Aviso de inundaciones repentinas para cinco municipios y advertencia para 19 - http://end.pr/11ZqdOkTRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:16am
California dad 'begged for his life' as police beat him to death - witnesses
rt.com
A California father of four died Wednesday shortly after a group of police allegedly beat him with batons as he lay defenseless on the sidewalk. Cops, before confiscating witness' cameras, also reportedly unleashed a canine unit on him.TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:15am
On Top Magazine Timeline
Minnesota House Approves Gay Marriage Bill
http://www.ontopmag.com/article.aspx?id=15210&MediaType=1&Category=26
On Top Magazine TimelineTRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTToday, May 11th 8:12am
Timeline Photos
Mother's Day weekend gets off to a splendid start when Mercury and the Sun align in perfect conjunction in Taurus ... the Zodiac's comfort zone. But don't get too comfortable because ANTINOUS THE MOON GOD forms aspects to unpredictable Neptune and impulsive Uranus which could hold some surprises. Unexpected guests could appear on your doorstep ... On Mother's Day Sunday remember that your "mother" does not have to be your biological mother ... or even a biological female! On Sunday and you can forget about your diet when ANTINOUS THE MOON GOD aligns in perfect conjunction with exaggeration-prone Jupiter in convivial Gemini. This is a recipe for over-indulgence and excess in food, drink and spending money ... which is not necessarily a bad thing ... just saying ....
Full Antinous Astro Forecast here:
http://antinousstars.blogspot.com/2013/05/antinous-astrology-forecast-may-9th-to.html
Image: Offerings to Antinous ... by Felix d'Eon.TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTThursday, May 2nd, 2013 5:14pm
Timeline Photos
The number of suicides among middle-aged Americans rose by 28 percent this past decade, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The rate among whites is even more startling: A 40 percent increase in suicides from 1999 to 2010 among the age group 35 to 64. One theory blames the long economic recession. However, in the same period, suicide rates for younger and older people did not change, and there was little change in the rate among middle-aged blacks and Hispanics. (Suicide was the 10th leading cause of death nationwide among people 10 and over in 2009, accounting for 36,891 deaths, the CDC says, making it a greater health risk than hypertension, liver disease, HIV, Parkinson's, and homicide). At the same time, some are saying depression, a key cause, is mis-diagnosed or over-diagnosed. Why are more middle-aged Americans killing themselves?
http://yhoo.it/132CrbATRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTThursday, April 11th, 2013 10:17am
Brains as Clear as Jell-O for Scientists to Explore
www.nytimes.com
Researchers said they have made a mouse brain and part of a human brain transparent so that networks of neurons can be examined intact.TRAIN THIS STORYSAVE THIS STORYSHARE THIS STORY - A LISTThursday, March 28th, 2013 1:17pm
PUERTO RICO NEWS: 1:10 PM 3/28/2013
prnewslinks.blogspot.com
Comprehensive collection of newslinks to Puerto Rico, The Caribbean and The Latino Culture - Amplia colección de newslinks a Puerto Rico, el Caribe y la Cultura Latina
Puerto Rico News - https://prnewslinks.blogspot.com/ | NewsLinks℠ to Puerto Rico, Caribbean and Latino Culture - NewsLinks℠ a Puerto Rico, el Caribe y la Cultura Latina
Saturday, May 11, 2013
5.11.13 - HEADLINES: Puerto Rico to Cut Off Water to Non-payers - 5/11/2013 | Governor: I’ll cut water bills by 2016 - 5/10/2013 | The New York Times on Venezuela and Honduras: A Case of Journalistic ... - Venezuelanalysis.com - 5/10/2013 | Part linguistic primer, part cultural history, "The Story of Spanish" zips along crisply - Polyglot Stew - Wall Street Journal - 5/10/2013 By JOEL MILLMAN | Spanish Government, Business Woo Investors on Wall Street - 5/11/2013 - Latin American Herald Tribune
Puerto Rico to Cut Off Water to Non-payers - 5/11/2013
Governor: I’ll cut water bills by 2016. Read: http://goo.gl/T7Fts - 5/10/2013
The New York Times on Venezuela and Honduras: A Case of Journalistic ... - Venezuelanalysis.com - 5/10/2013
Polyglot Stew - Wall Street Journal - 5/10/2013
Rusia confirma que está completando la entrega de misiles al régimen sirio http:... - 5/10/2013 - Caribnews
Tropical Cyclone Jamala - 5/10/2013
Medley Richie Rey y Bobby Cruz con la sinfónica de Puerto Rico - 12/28/2012 - crlsgardel
David Cameron's working-class adviser 'pushed from No 10 by old Etonians' - 5/11/2013
Puerto Rico Gov. Luis Fortuño speaks to Univision News - 3/18/2012 - UnivisionNews1
Spanish Government, Business Woo Investors on Wall Street - 5/11/2013 - Latin American Herald Tribune
Governor: I’ll cut water bills by 2016. Read: http://goo.gl/T7Fts - 5/10/2013
The New York Times on Venezuela and Honduras: A Case of Journalistic ... - Venezuelanalysis.com - 5/10/2013
Polyglot Stew - Wall Street Journal - 5/10/2013
By JOEL MILLMAN
In 30 years of reporting on Latin America, I've learned that the proper name for the language most Americans call "Spanish" is "Castilian"—"Castellano," in the parlance of my south-of-the-border sources. It's an homage to those plucky warlords from Castile who unified Spain in the 15th century. (There are many other tongues spoken in Spain that, arguably, are equally "Spanish.") And I know "Iberian," an adjective referring to all things "Spanish," derives from a river, the Ebro, which crosses the northeast corner of the peninsula and links the city of Zaragoza to the Mediterranean.
The Story of Spanish
By Jean-Benoît Nadeau & Julie Barlow
St. Martin's, 428 pages, $27.99
St. Martin's, 428 pages, $27.99
Corbis
But it wasn't until I read "The Story of Spanish" that I discovered "Zaragoza" is a bastardization of the Latin "Caesar Augustus" or that the words "Spain" and "Spanish" came from the Phoenicians. Their explorers arrived on the Iberian coast around 1200 B.C., and noted it was over-run with a long-eared mammal that multiplied rapidly. They described it as "I-shepan-ha": the "Land of Rabbits." Hundreds of years later, the Romans Latinized it to "Hispania."
Jean-Benoît Nadeau and Julie Barlow's book is filled with such nuggets and is a guide to how one region's polyglot stew of ancient words and phrases spread to become the primary language of nearly half a billion people worldwide, as well as "the unofficial second language of the United States."
Part linguistic primer, part cultural history, "The Story of Spanish" zips along crisply. We witness mostly-forgotten kings and the scholars who filled their courts creating a formal grammar and syntax from "vulgar" Latin hundreds of years ahead of speakers in the rest of Romanized Europe. And we discover how bits of Arabic, Germanic, Latin and Celtic took hold among "Spanish" speakers.
The Spanish for "cotton," for example, is "algodón," one of many Spanish nouns —"almuerzo" ("lunch") and "almacén" ("warehouse") are two others—that retain the Arabic definite article, "al." The Arabic "al-qutn" became "cotone" in Italian and "coton" in French, in both cases after a cycle through Latin. Only Spanish ditched the Roman middleman and created a slew of double-articled oddities such as "el algodón" and "el almacén."
However entertaining "The Story of Spanish" is to browse, at times it feels as though its authors, a Canadian couple who have previously written books about French, are over-reaching. "Languages generally acquire prestige when their speakers gain political clout," they write, and that seems true enough when they are describing how Rome co-opted local chieftains by franchising things like tax collection—which required Latin fluency.
Yet this is precisely what didn't happen during the centuries of Moorish rule (700-1492) in Spain, when few among the native elite learned Arabic. And the authors concede that Spanish's success in the New World owed less to political "clout" than to the smallpox virus that triggered a genocide that some estimate eliminated 90% of our hemisphere's original non-Spanish speakers.
While I did enjoy learning that a "ten gallon" cowboy hat has nothing to do with measuring liquid volume—it's a corruption of the Spanish phrase "tan galán," or "how spiffy"—much of what passes for erudition in "The Story of Spanish" feels like trivia. That's particularly the case when it comes to the two Canadians' understanding of Spanish-speakers south of their border.
Take Cinco de Mayo, which the authors report was organized in San Francisco in the 1970s as a "pan-ethnic U.S. celebration for all Hispanic immigrants." They write: "It was a savvy choice: most Latin Americans, even Mexicans, had never heard of it, so it didn't pit nationalities against each other. In the long run, the popularity of Cinco de Mayo was also secured by the fact that it has no religious association, a handy feature, since 15 percent of Hispanics in the United States today are Evangelical Christians, not Catholics."
This is just silly. There was already such a day commemorated "pan-ethnically" across the Americas: September 15, which marks the 1810 "grito" ("shout") that launched a continent-wide rebellion from Spain. Cinco de Mayo rose, like much Latino activism, from the campuses of California's state university system in the 1970s, when Chicanos were eager to include their ethnic pride in an era of raucous social "identity" movements. We celebrate "Cinco de Mayo" mainly because on September 15 college kids are barely settled into their dorms, making May 5 the better date for partying—which beer and liquor companies were not slow to seize upon.
The authors undermine their authority on language—after all, their book is called "The Story of Spanish," not "The Story of Spanish-Speakers"—with similar digressions into the films of Luis Buñuel, Cuba's medical diplomacy or the fact that both Colombian pop star Shakira and Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim are of Lebanese descent. The bitter deathbed revelation from Simón Bolívar that the authors quote is apt: "From heroism to ridicule is but a single step."
—Mr. Millman covered Latin America for the Journal from 1996 to 2010. He reports now from Portland, Ore.
A version of this article appeared May 11, 2013, on page C12 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Polyglot Stew.
Rusia confirma que está completando la entrega de misiles al régimen sirio http:... - 5/10/2013 - Caribnews
Tropical Cyclone Jamala - 5/10/2013
Medley Richie Rey y Bobby Cruz con la sinfónica de Puerto Rico - 12/28/2012 - crlsgardel
David Cameron's working-class adviser 'pushed from No 10 by old Etonians' - 5/11/2013
Puerto Rico Gov. Luis Fortuño speaks to Univision News - 3/18/2012 - UnivisionNews1
Spanish Government, Business Woo Investors on Wall Street - 5/11/2013 - Latin American Herald Tribune
Podcast: The Arecibo Observatory
Podcast: The Arecibo Observatory
by ASTRONOMY CAST on MAY 11, 2013
Want to stay on top of all the space news? Follow @universetoday on Twitter
Or subscribe to: astronomycast.com/podcast.xml with your podcatching software.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)