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#20 | ||||
Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 685
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Ho Gonzalo,
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Just can't help feeling that Franco may have had something to do with the vigorous upholding of `Castillian', to counter the regionalist/secessionist tendencies in Spain, but I add that this is mere guessing on my part Quote:
However, illiteracy in Spain and in South America, was extremely widespread right up to WWII, especially in the rural areas, and this muddies the waters considerably due to the synonymity that was imputed to terms such as for example `Facon' with any knife worn by a gaucho and in a part/s of Spain, if I read Forton correctly, `Faca' was used interchangeably with `Navaja'. As I pointed out in another thread, languages are dominated by conventions, which lend meanings and nuances to words, that are at times irrational or their derivation is outright incorrect - The "Puņal Criollo" is probably the most obvious example that I can bring to this discussion. And once these conventions have taken hold, it will take a very long time to correct the misuse of certain terms, and often we are stuck with them because of the legacy of historical writings. And then there is the issue of words lapsing into obsolescence, but refusing to disappear completely, such as the English `Bodkin' or Spanish `Rejon' and `Guifero' (both akin to a bodkin, but some possibly with a cutting edge). Quote:
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And when was it first compiled? Cheers Chris Last edited by Chris Evans; 23rd July 2009 at 03:32 AM. |
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