#159070 - 02/28/08 12:19 AM
Re: A Spanish Word for Today
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3883
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
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el pez noun
fish
Estaba como un pez en el agua "He felt right at home(was as snug as a bug in a rug.)" literally "He was like a fish in water."
Es un pez gordo "He's a bigwig (a big shot)." Literally, "He's a big fish."
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#159102 - 02/28/08 04:20 AM
Re: A Spanish Word for Today
[Re: D. Allan]
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Registered: 04/28/07
Posts: 156
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Those who are able to read Spanish could try a little Portuguese, which has many similarities in terms of written texts (pronunciation changes a little). That would be one more option in a new field to learn new things and communicating more amply. Some tips about Portuguese in comparision with Spanish: The endings ...ción in Portuguese is ...ção (Sp- oración; Pt- oração  ) The articles: Sp- la/las; Pt- a/as -- fem. // Sp- el/los; Pt- o/os -- masc. Diminutive: Sp- ito/ita; Pt- inho/inha. Ex. Sp- casita; Pt- casinha Of course there are great variation in vocabulary, so that it's not just a question of endings. . . * Countries where Portuguese is spoken and is the official language: Portugal, Brazil, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, Guiné Bissau, East Timor * A good dictionary Spanish/Portuguese for free in the Net which even brings the sound of pronunciations: http://www.wordreference.com/ptes/
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#159389 - 02/29/08 10:01 PM
Re: A Spanish Word for Today
[Re: D. Allan]
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Administrator of Foro Adventista
Registered: 02/02/02
Posts: 17316
Loc: Rio Grande Valley, Texas
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Word: la arca Pronunciation: AHR-kah (The Spanish r here is pronounced with a tap of the tongue against the front of the palate.) Meaning: ark (either the chest containing the Ten Commandments of the Hebrews, or a large boat) Example: Y Dios dijo a Noé, hazte un arca de madera de gofer. Translation: And God said to Noah, make yourself an ark of gopher wood. Warning: Arca is feminine.
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#159882 - 03/04/08 03:19 AM
Re: A Spanish Word for Today
[Re: D. Allan]
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Registered: 04/28/07
Posts: 156
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Thank you for that! Very interesting!
Curiosity asks: why did the Spanish and Portuguese languages come to have these differences, when their countries lie side by side on the Iberian penninsula? Was it due to geographic, ethnic, political or other causes? Well, they developed differently, as within Spain itself there is the catalán, which is (roughly) half Spanish, half French. Maybe that is because at that time there was no Internet nor rock'n'roll. . .
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