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Old 25th April 2020, 12:39 AM   #31
David R
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kronckew
my early exposure to spanish was of course flavoured by the colonial version spoken south of the border, in my years in texas and california. also flavoured by liberal internal applications of the above mentioned tequilla (in margharitas). what doesn't kill you makes you stronger.

surprise! when i got to valencia on a summer training cruise, they all lithp their S's! apparently, one of the royals way back had a lisp, so rather than embarrass him and lose their heads, everyone around him always lisped too. it became fashionable, and the custom perpetuates to this day, but never made it to the new world. so for a few days i was called by the local female wildlife as 'that crazy mexican'. the portugese also seems to have resisted the lisp.
I had two teachers of Spanish, about 20 years ago, one from Colombia and the other from Spain, so I can confirm your experience. The differences go beyond the lisp, and even effect the vocabulary. One explanation being that many of the colonists were actually Italian, another that archaic forms were preserved in the colonial patois (as with US Anglic) and the other that the colonists picked up sailors slang on the voyage.
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Old 25th April 2020, 11:24 AM   #32
fernando
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Originally Posted by kronckew
... the young lady i'd mentioned was a bikini clad brunette beach beauty ...
Wayne, tell me that you are not color blind ... nor short sighted .
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Old 25th April 2020, 02:00 PM   #33
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Originally Posted by fernando
Wayne, tell me that you are not color blind ... nor short sighted .
No, I am 'far-sighted' and all my rods and cones respond to the normal range of colours. I need reading glasses, but my sense of touch is still working. I am however racially colour-blind.

As a proper old fart and curmudgeon, and a founding member of the Association of True BSTDS, I hate all people of all races, skin and hair colours, creeds, education, social level, physical appearance equally. Audemus jura nostra defendere.

(I do however have a weakness for cute young blonde women. Getting older just increases the upper boundary of the age range of the 'young' part of that initial paranthetic sentence. Heck, I also don't mind a lot if they are older than me.)

Last edited by kronckew; 25th April 2020 at 02:20 PM.
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Old 25th April 2020, 02:31 PM   #34
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Originally Posted by David R
... archaic forms were preserved in the colonial patois (as with US Anglic) ...
The overall accent and language of modern USA (and Canadian) citizens is actually closer to pre-Victorian 'Proper King's English', The current proliferation of local regional variants in the UK enables me to tell people here That I'M the one speaking 'Proper' English, not them.
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Old 25th April 2020, 05:37 PM   #35
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Originally Posted by kronckew
We explored our other differences in depth later.
Very interethting!!!!!
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Old 26th April 2020, 02:01 PM   #36
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"The overall accent and language of modern USA (and Canadian) citizens is actually closer to pre-Victorian 'Proper King's English', The current proliferation of local regional variants in the UK enables me to tell people here That I'M the one speaking 'Proper' English, not them. "

What absolute rubbish! The only proper English is English English - like wot we rabbit.
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Old 26th April 2020, 04:03 PM   #37
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WOW !! Can't believe I posted this 2 1/2 years ago. Don't know where the time has gone.

Since this original post the loose grip has been correctly positioned and repaired. It's now snug and tight. The blade re-sharpened and a custom, frontier style sheath accompanies it. It's now ready to return to service, if needed. LOL

Rick
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Old 26th April 2020, 05:24 PM   #38
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Excellent job. Great knife.

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