Friday, December 24, 2010

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¡FELIZ NAVIDAD!


How Are Judith Leiber Bags Made






Want to know more? Click here to listen to and Crespo Barrueco counted in The Voltaire armchair.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Amf Bowling Coupons 2010

Playing with axes.

VISCERAL. January, 2011. Foreword


Mario Crespo Enrique Vila-Matas


Montero Glez

Deborah Vukusic


Tomas Sanchez Santiago Salem


Carlos Fraga Lucia
Alberto Haj-Saleh


Carlos Herrero

Patxi Irurzun



Marcelo Lujan Adriana Bonilla Bañares

Gsus

Daniel Ruiz García

David Murders

Joaquín Piqueras

Francesco Spinoglio María Couceiro



July Valdeón Sonia Blanco

Fides

José Manuel Vara

Roxana Popelka

Manuel Vilas

Jorge Espina

Ascoz

Brenda David Refoyo

Safrika

Iñaki Echarte

Alejandra Vidal Zina

Esteban Gutierrez David González Gómez



Ana Pérez Javier Esteban Cañamares



Estelle Baudet

Alfonso Talavera Xen Rabanal

Inma Luna

Karmelo C. Das Javier Iribarren





Vicente Muñoz Álvarez Marta Fernandez La Bohe



Kutxi Romero José Ángel Barrueco Epilogue


I can not think how to explain what I'm supposed to be my name on a book by many of the authors that I have marked on my understanding of the literary in recent times, but before post, before starting the promotion by storm and I, like vosostros, hold it in my hands to read it in full, I can tell you that this has been a before and after he could not even imagine when I wrote the first line of this tale of three pages thinking what I could do that would 'gut', I just wanted to thank you for it.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

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B A B E L.

invariable feminine noun formed from the Latin Bible Babel, which in turn came from Bavel Hebrew, meaning "confusion".

In Latin, Babel was a proper name sometimes used unwavering as a synonym for Babylonia, name of the city where the tower stood with workers were confused by speaking different languages, or also to designate the tower itself.


In modern languages, babel is a common name meaning "place where there is great disorder and confusion, they talk a lot without understanding", or "disorder y confusión".

En español se ve frecuentemente escrito con mayúscula, como en este ejemplo de la novela Palabras en juego, de la autora paraguaya Yula Riquelme de Molinas:


De no ser así, aún estaría maldiciendo en su silla de ruedas la Babel que nos rodea.

(La Palabra del Día)

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Dangers Of Dental Tatanium

Do you know where you could get into science fiction? 223

Yesterday I went to the presentation of Five lullabies of Fco Javier Pérez, illustrated by Fidel Martínez and edited by Martinez Edges. As everyone who comes here knows that Xavi is my friend and yet, I firmly and sincerely convinced that is the best thing that's happened to English literature at the moment and that anyone who values \u200b\u200bsomething I believe should read, not I will dwell much on the book. For now. When I reread it and such. But Harvey said something that I've been around despite my hangover. He (the thread of a lecture on Anna Kavan which should boost sales of his books in Spain) that he has no problem with being considered a science fiction writer, but knows a few to play them lot of balls. And then, all present looked at me me. OWNED. I add that it was a relaxed time with colleagues so that nobody would think strange things, but I think got it right, more or less. I write scifi understood as a set of referenias, expectations, winks and violence. I sweat the balls to have people look at you more or less as a separate species in its aesthetic scheme poruqe safety I'll do what I get from them. What does the repatea me, much, is to publish as a writer of scifi English. Your book appears only in areas teeming with beings whose literary concept is seen in discussions like this . Without going any further. People talk about marketing and typos-I could tell you many things about other publishing liked by all at all the rock group lambasting SWAT-e-books and philological boar and never, absolutely never talk about writing science fiction. Repatea I also meet characters who treat you as if you were an asshole when you are making for their lives and that issue you can do as they exit the balls and dizzy every year and a half every two days and then find out that the colleague who has made you a FREE home, which you got into this mess of surreal moments in which it has been insulting and artistic ability has not even been sent a copy of the book fucking months after publication and I'm going to have to send me copies of my because I get the balls to pay for a copy of something that is helping to sell. So you know, Setting . Send me your mailing address. I had asked in the mail, but that's more fun.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Screen Printed Pinnies



Well, I've always thought that Miguel Luna write a fucking and so I Gotcha Poetry is not dead ( DVD Editions) and my first thought is that a book that a section on the 223 bus of Continental Auto deserve my respect because in the end we all love the homeland and my homeland is a green bus that does not smell of all wrong and have passed some of the most massive binges of my life, but actually are not drinking ever, but something more Dasein you have left and you know you'll never be able to write poems about it and well someone else does. Like the book of L. Miguel also because it is insulting. Insulting the form of those books that you catch a verse at random and you say "but what shit ...?!» and your head turns and says this is not poetry (as if there is something that out) but you know that such capitals are the same pose that almost destroys you, I speak literally, for fourteen years, to age L. Miguel says he has en este libro —aunque la edad es siempre un accidente que nunca justifca cosas como la condescendencia, apunto—, y que te costó siglos y lecturas llegar al momento en el que escribes esta líneas para aplaudir libros como estos. Porque estás de vuelta de un millón de cosas. Y este libro está de vuelta de un millón de cosas. Soy autobiográfico porque me da la gana y es mi blog, pero este libro tiene muchos filos. Eso mola. Casi todo lo que escribe esta mujer tiene muchos filos. A lo Pizarnik , aunque a mí no me gusta la Pizarnik y por eso me parece mejor que la Pizarnik . Ahí es nada. Doy mi opinión porque es mi blog, pero hay que tenerlos bien puestos para hablar de bowls, but today, this November 27, after the pop, to be up pOp eggs, need to be more well-placed to write a poem about fights and cite anecdotes gafapastas Foster Wallace, because I remember Nietzsche -mistranslated "said his neighbors were not worth the fucking effort Curran to become a sea urchin spines, but the Poetry think so, yes it's worth, and always cool that you remember.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

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L U N A.

El nombre de nuestro satélite nos viene del latín luna, contracción de lucina, una forma del verbo luceo, lucere 'brillar', 'iluminar'. El verbo latino luceo provenía de la raíz indoeuropea leuk- 'brillar', 'iluminar'.

Muchas palabras de nuestra lengua derivan del nombre del astro, que los griegos llamaban Selene.
Así, lunar es el nombre de una mancha oscura y más o menos redonda en la piel; aunque no se sabe con certeza si se llamó así porque su redondez recordaba la de la Luna o porque se creía que el lunar era causado por la influencia del astro sobre el niño aún en el seno de su madre.

Esta segunda hipótesis parece ser la preferida por Corominas, quien cita un pasaje de Suetonio en el que se dice que Augusto nació con varias manchas sobre el cuerpo en la forma, orden y número de las estrellas de la Osa Mayor.
Este etimólogo señala que sobre esta base puede haberse asentado la creencia del influjo de la Luna sobre la aparición de los lunares.

No se detienen allí beliefs about the effect of the Moon on men suffering lunatic madness is not permanent, but at intervals, as the phases of the moon.
And do not forget the rear window, the small round glass that is the main part of the glasses, and also the audience of the theater, which is shaped like a crescent. Neither
Lutjanus the animal so named because their fur has spots that resemble moles. Neither
Monday, the first day of the week, which took its name from the Latin dies moon 'day dedicated to the moon'.

(Word of the Day)

Monday, October 25, 2010

At & T Turbo Solitaire

M A R I P O S A.

The Butterfly Castilian name in history as colorful as his wings, comes from old songs y dichos infantiles que se referían a algunas de las ciento sesenta mil especies de insectos conocidos con ese nombre y las llamaban a posarse con versos tales como "María pósate, descansa en el suelo".


Los ingleses prefirieron llamarlas butterfly 'mosca de la manteca', un nombre parecido al que le dieron los alemanes, Milchdieb 'ladrona de leche'; los franceses, papillon, del latín papilione, y los portugueses, borboleta, del antiguo belbellita, formado a partir del adjetivo latino bellus 'bueno', 'bonito'.

(La Palabra del Día)

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Rosacea In Black Skin

QUERID@S AMIG@S

ESTUVE 15 DÍAS SIN COMPUTADOR.

UN DÍA MURIÓ.

DISO SAVED THE HARD, BUT NOTHING THAT I HAD.

lost everything.

NOW RETURN TO BLOG AND MY WORDS.

LOVE A TOD @ S . MNB.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Milena Velba Husband?

P I Z Z A.

The name of this Italian dish comes from the old Germanic bizz, which meant 'bite' and 'bite' (amount of food you can take a bite).
In its original form, the pizza pan comprises a circular and flattened, covered with mozzarella cheese, tomatoes and olive oil.
By extending por Italia a lo largo del siglo XIX, algunas características del plato fueron cambiando: al llegar a Roma sustituyó el tomate por cebolla y aceitunas y en la Lombardía se enriqueció con anchoas, entre otras modificaciones.
A comienzos del siglo XX, la pizza cruzó el océano y llegó a Buenos Aires, donde la masa se hizo más gruesa, y a Nueva York, donde se le añadió un variopinto conjunto de ingredientes: rebanadas de salchichas, panceta, camarones y trozos de ají.
Sin embargo, fue sólo a mediados del siglo pasado, después de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, cuando el antiguo alimento napolitano conquistó el mundo.

En el Diccionario de la Academia, pizza aparece escrito con doble z y en bastardilla, indicando que se trata de una palabra que aún no ha sido españolizada.

(La Palabra del Día)

Saturday, September 11, 2010

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H I S T E R I A.

El nombre de esta enfermedad psíquica proviene de la ignorancia que prevaleció hasta fines del siglo XIX, cuando estaba considerada como una dolencia propia de las mujeres, puesto que se creía que era causada por problemas en el útero, palabra proveniente del griego hystera y ésta, a su vez, del sánscrito udáran 'abdomen'.

Fueron los trabajos del profesor Jean-Martin Charcot y, sobre todo, de su discípulo en el hospital parisino de la Salpetrière, Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), los que permitieron develar el misterio de la histeria, mostrándola como una enfermedad causada por conflictos en la vida psíquica inconsciente, tanto en hombres como en mujeres.

A partir de su Estudios sobre la histeria, que publicó junto con Josef Breuer en 1895, Freud desarrolló una compleja teoría sobre el funcionamiento de la mente y de la afectividad del ser humano, basada en sus investigaciones sobre una vida psíquica inconsciente, hasta entonces poco conocida, y en la influencia de esta actividad inconsciente sobre el comportamiento y los afectos.

La voz histeria llegó al español a través del francés hystérie, con origen en el mencionado hystera más el sufijo -ia, usado en español en los nombres de algunas diseases.

(Word of the Day)

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

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R E M U N E R A R.

used since ancient word in our language with the sense of 'reward' or 'reward'. Appears in Castilian

at least since the sixteenth century, in the Book of the Seven Sages of Rome (1530).

The earliest form of this word is found in the Indo-European root mei-, which resulted in the Latin munus, muneris 'office', 'office', 'obligation', from which emerged the Munero verb,-are 'giving' 'reward' and this, paid, "are 'reward', 'pay' and 'be paid'.

Munus also gave rise to other Latin words that survived in Castilian and other Romance languages \u200b\u200bsuch as municipius 'town', munificentia 'bounty' and inmunis 'immune' ('free of any obligation,' later 'safe from diseases').

(Word of the Day)

Monday, August 9, 2010

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A G O S T O.

this month's history dates back over two thousand years when in August it acquired its name due to the ambitions of the Roman Emperor Gaius Julius Caesar Octavian, known as Octavio Augusto, who does not would be less than Julius Caesar, his predecessor and adoptive father. Augustus, who was not part of the birth name, was a title conferred on him by the Senate, taking the adjective meaning 'excellent' 'Majestic', as denoting August in our language today. In the ancient Roman calendar the year began in March and was named the sixth month Sextilis, but in the year 24 BC, Octavian Augustus decided to give his name and since then, Sextilis called Augustus. Octavio imitated and the late Julius Caesar, who had done the same twenty-one years before the fifth month, until then called Quinctilis, which he renamed Julius in honor of the family Iulia, to which he belonged. However, giving its name to Sextilis seemed little to Octavio, who believed he had not yet achieved the same glory that Julius Caesar, as did Julius 31 días, y Augustus, sólo 29. Por esa razón, el emperador alteró la duración de varios meses, quitando y poniendo días, hasta lograr que su mes tuviera 31 días. Por eso, aún hoy, dos mil años después, julio y agosto tienen 31 días cada uno.

Cabe recordar que los miembros de la familia Iulia, a la que pertenecían Julio César y, por adopción, Octavio Augusto, creían que esta gens había sido fundada nueve siglos antes por Iulo (Ascanio para los griegos), hijo de Eneas y nieto de la diosa Afrodita, según se narra en La Eneida

(La Palabra del Día)

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

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I N S E C T O.

Esta palabra proviene del latín insectus, del mismo significado, formada a partir del participio pasivo del verbo insecare 'hacer un corte o incisión', en alusión a las ceñiduras que marcan las partes que componen el cuerpo de estos animales.

El verbo secare dejó una vasta herencia en las lenguas romances con palabras como secante, la línea que corta un plano o el plano que corta un volumen; segar, cortar las mieses; bisectriz, la recta que corta un ángulo en dos partes iguales; disecar, cortar los tejidos de un cadáver; intersección, el punto donde se cortan dos rectas o la recta donde se cortan dos planos.

La idea de cortar también estaba presente en el nombre que los griegos daban a los insectos: éntomon, voz derivada de éntemnein 'cortar', que se refería a un ser dividido en pedazos.

En las lenguas modernas, éntomon dio lugar a entomología 'estudio de los insectos' y también a términos del lenguaje médico que se refieren a la idea de cortar, tales como lobotomía o traqueotomía.

(La Palabra del Día)

Monday, July 12, 2010

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P U L P O.

Desde un acuario de Alemania, un pulpo con supuestos poderes adivinatorios ha concitado la atención de la opinión pública mundial prediciendo resultados de partidos de fútbol, aunque el autor de estas líneas coincide con el escritor Eduardo Galeano en que probablemente "este pulpo sea un corrupto".

De todas maneras, tal perhaps worth remembering that the word octopus, which is recorded in English for at least the fourteenth century, comes from Latin polypus, word formed from Greek polloi (many) you can (feet), so also a centipede could have been an octopus or a spider with eight legs, but, well, that did not happen.

Corominas assumes that the polypus or became, or the effect of a dialectal phenomenon is verified in some talking in northern Spain.

worth noting that the Latin word also gave voice to English polyp, with an "a pedunculated tumor, benign, which is formed and grows in the mucous membranes and, in some cases can evolve towards malignancy. "

There is also a named coelenterate polyp and finally, the dictionary states that the octopuses also can be called polyps, although the latter seems an occurrence that can only be in the library DRAE antiquities, dictionary should be of use.

(Word of the Day)

Saturday, July 10, 2010

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F Ú T B O L.

has been said that football in the modern world replaced the harsh responsibilities of the medieval knights.
This sport was born in England in the nineteenth century and quickly spread throughout the world, took its name from the words foot 'foot' and ball 'ball', two words whose origins can be traced very far.
Indeed, the roots from foot-and pod-ped, the prehistoric Indo-European languages, which also led to pous Greek word 'pie', from whom words like tripod, podium and antipode. Also come from those roots Sanskrit padas voice 'foot' and the Lithuanian peda 'step', but from the point of view of our language, its derivation has proved most important Latin pedes 'foot', which resulted in countless English words such as chiropody, laborer, pedal tricycle.
Ball, meanwhile, comes from the Greek ballein, which meant throwing.
The word soccer was rejected initially by the purists, who considered an anglicized, so they try to impose football, a replica semantics, in fact, the English word. Football
first appeared in the academic Dictionary in 1927, with a definition which is carefully avoided football:

similar to the ball game, which differs in that the ball or playing ball with his foot. However, in its later editions, the dictionary refers directly to football, recognizing it as preferable.

(Word of the Day)

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

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H I N C H A.

The first football fan in history lived in Montevideo in the early XX, worked in the National Football Club, the second old Uruguayan club.

saddler was by profession and was responsible for inflate (swell) the balls of Central Park, the headquarters of the National.
Miguel Prudencio Reyes was called, but was better known as "Fat Kings" or "the fan." Our man fan club supporter Montevideo, and their raucous cries: "National!" Were famous in the early last century in the fields where he played his club.

And it's easy to imagine how the cries resound saddler taking into account that ballooned the ball only with the strength of his lungs.

During games, Other fans often comment to the noisy demonstrations of Kings: "Look how the fan yells."

And gradually swells word went to apply to most National supporters shouted at parties, and later spread to others and, finally, to the supporters of all clubs.

The word spread to the rest of the world speaking with the Olympic Games in 1924 and 1928, when Uruguay won the football gold medals, and the 1930 World Cup in Montevideo.

(Word of the Day)

Thursday, June 24, 2010

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N I G E R I A.

This West African country took its name from the Niger River, which irrigates the area of \u200b\u200bthe continent and also served to name the Republic of Niger.

is not known with certainty where the name comes from the river, but some say it comes from the Canaanite nigir voice, which means 'river lost in the sand'.

Others say the name of the river originates in the Tuareg language n'eghirren, which means' water that floats. "

is also said that Niger's voice comes from tamaskek gher N'gheren language, meaning "river of rivers" or "river among rivers."

(Word of the Day)

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

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P O N T Í F I C E.

few years after the legendary founding of Rome Romulus and Remus (753 BC), when the monarchs of the young city still occupied in religious rituals, the second king of Rome, Numa Pompilius, felt that his successors would have to deal with war and the government of a become increasingly complex, so that would not be able to think of the liturgy.

With that idea, Numa decided to give the care of an official religious ceremonies or priest who play that role exclusively religious.

After much soul searching, conferred the dignity of priests, who were the caretakers of the bridge over the Tiber River, a task at that time was of enormous political and military importance, as well as religious.

The word pontifex pontis merge 'bridge' and facere 'make', alluding to their business: caring for the bridge.
Some centuries later, Julius Caesar decided to assume the dignity of Pontifex Maximus 'high priest', the largest of the pontiffs, to indicate its position as a leader not only civil and military, but also religious.

From Augusto, this title was linked to that of Emperor for several centuries until the arrival to power of Constantine (306 AD), who adopted Christianity as official religion of the Empire.

True to tradition consagrada por sus predecesores, Constantino siguió usando durante algún tiempo el título de sumo pontífice, ahora como representante de Cristo.

Pero los obispos de Roma no demoraron en reivindicar para sí la condición de únicos representantes de Cristo en la Tierra y acabaron por incorporar el título de Pontifex Maximus, que los papas ostentan hasta hoy.

(La Palabra del Día)

Thursday, May 20, 2010

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C A T A R A T A.

Palabra proveniente del latín cataracta, que a su vez se tomó del griego kataractes, que tenía dos significados, tal como ocurre hoy en español.

Por un lado, cataracta era una cascada, vocablo que nos llegó en una de las versiones latinas de the Bible, when it describes the universal deluge:

"cataracts of heaven were opened and it rained for forty days and forty nights."

But Cataracta could also be a metal gate or door used to prevent passage.

In the first meaning, the meaning is derived current as a waterfall waterfall in our language. From the second comes
use in English to refer to an eye condition, when an obstacle that prevents the passage of light rays.

(Word of the Day)

Thursday, May 6, 2010

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F É N I X.

was the name of a legendary bird that lived somewhere in Arabia. After living

for five hundred years, was consumed by fire, but soon, a new bird born from the ashes.

the Egyptians, the phoenix represented the sun, which dies every night and is reborn each dawn radiant.

name comes from the Egyptian mythological bird bynw, whence was derived the Greek word and it Phoinix, Latin Phoenix.

(Word of the Day)

Sunday, April 25, 2010

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H Í G A D O.

Our language is but a late Latin, enriched by many elements Goths and Arabs after these people occupied the Iberian Peninsula.

could therefore expect that the name appeared related to liver palabra latina iecur, o tal vez con la griega épatos, pero ¿por qué hígado?

Se trata de una historia curiosa que comienza con una digresión gastronómica.

Los franceses dieron a conocer al mundo el foie gras de oca, una delicatesse ( delicia) elaborada con hígado de oca hipertrofiado con dosis abundantes de maíz.

Pero el producto es mucho más antiguo que Francia y los franceses; ya era conocido por los atenienses del siglo de Pericles, quienes, como no tenían maíz, cebaban a las ocas con higos (sykon, en griego) y, como tampoco sabían francés, lo llamaron hépar sýkoton.

Esta exquisitez gastronómica fue legada a Roma, where gourmet Apicius Marcus innovated by introducing the custom of dipping the liver in a milk bath with honey to increase size and improve its taste with new fragrances.

The Hépar sýkoton of the Greeks in Rome iecur ficatum called 'liver with figs', a term that eventually came to refer to the liver, with figs or not, any animal, the man also.

few centuries, and the word iécur was lost in the darkness of the times, while ficatum continued to be used as the name of the court, until the Spaniard fégadu, the ancient Castilian and Portuguese fígado and finally the liver English modern, documented since the late fifteenth century.

(Word of the Day)

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

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PREMIO PRINCESS

AURORAINES HE RECEIVED THE AWARD PRINCESS.

I greatly appreciate the musta GRANTED.

THANK YOU, DEAR AGNES.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

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N O M E O L V I D E S.

There are about fifty species of the genus or raspilla Miosotis, also known as impatiens.

Most have flowers 1 cm. in diameter with five blue petals that grow on the ends of stems.

According to a legend that during many centuries was part of the amorous games in the European courts, carriers blue flower known as Miosotis or respilla never be forgotten by their lovers, which resulted also in English it is called impatiens.

This belief is so widespread in Europe that this name is semantically identical in many European languages: German, Vergissmeinicht, in English, forget-me-not, in Dutch, vergeet-mij-mietje; in Danish forglem -mig-ej; in Swedish, förgötmigej, in Romania, nu ma IUF, in Hungarian, nefelejcs, in Czech, pomnenka, in Russian, nezabudka, in Slovak, nezábudka, in Polish, niezapominajka, in Italian, notiscordardimé, and French , ne pas m'oubliez.

(Word of the Day)

Sunday, April 4, 2010

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¿LOS CONEJOS PONEN HUEVOS?



LINDAS HISTORICAL TRADITIONS OF KNOWLEDGE. According to the old

imaginations eggs were a symbol of life and emerged as a symbol to ensure fertility and good harvests.
According to the Christian, Holy Week recalls the Passion, Death and Resurrection of Christ.
is this last event, known as Easter.
What is your relationship with the eggs and the Easter bunny?
The origin of Easter dates back to 1513 a. C., when the Jewish people began their exodus from Egypt to the Land Promised, an event that was celebrated every year because it is the liberation of the Jewish people.
Tradition has it that the celebration involved the sacrifice of a lamb.
and seven days later, the Jewish people ate unleavened bread, which they called bread unleavened. "
Similarly, for Christians, Easter is the feast commemorating the Resurrection of Christ, after having given his life on the cross for the sins of the world.
is the Lamb of God who offers a sacrifice to cleanse men from sin.
Over time, the early Christians celebrated the Lord's Passover while the Jews, the night of the first full moon, the first month of spring.
not until the late fourth century, the celebration of Easter in Jerusalem was moved to Sunday after the Jewish holiday, celebrated separately on Good Friday and Easter.
Historians also mention as the origin of "Easter" spring celebration in honor of the Teutonic goddess of light known as "Easter", represented with an egg in his hand and a rabbit beside a sign of fertility.
There are many possible origins of the famous exchange of chocolate eggs at Easter.
Some stories date back to medieval times, when Easter was time to pay the census, and this payment was made on Easter Sunday and eggs.
There are also records of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in which the date of Easter in France, the monarch offered him baskets full of artistically decorated eggs as a symbol of the birth of a new life that represents the resurrection of Christ. MY FRIENDS

Christians, Catholics, Jews, Muslims, atheists, agnostics, the disenchanted and Hopeless I WISH YOU HAPPY EASTER.
EASTER IS A STEP TO ANOTHER LIFE. PHRASE THAT COMES TO YOU ALL.

a big hug from MNB.

Friday, March 19, 2010

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VOLVERÉ, VOLVERÉ, VOLVERÉ.

WHAT I'VE BEEN AWAY "TRACK" ...

PROMISE TO WEAR day and visit.

KISSES AND HUGS TO MY FRIENDS.

Monday, March 8, 2010

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H I P O C O R Í S TI CO.

Llámanse and affectionate nicknames, usually familial, formed by alteration of the original names, such as Pancho, Mingo, Charlie and Lola, even from the mispronunciation of children who are learning to speak.

The word came to English via the cultured, from the Greek hypokoristikós "caressing", derived from hypokorizomai "talk like little children."

The composition of this word is contained the Greek Korea "girl."

This voice is recorded in Castilian at least since 1867, but first appeared in the Dictionary of the Academy in the 1927 edition.

(Word of the Day)

Sunday, February 21, 2010

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Q U I L A T E.

The fruit of the carob seed was used by the ancient Greeks as the unit of measurement for weighing gems and precious stones due to the uniformity of weight attributed to him.

Carob keration was called in Greek, so that this word was also used as a unit of weight of the gems. A keration equivalent to the weight of a seed.

When the Arabs adopted the unit of weight, his name became quirat, which later became English carat.

currently has two denotations carat different carat jeweler and goldsmith.

The first is a unit of mass equal to 1 / 140 of an ounce, which represents about two-tenths of a gram.

Instead, the jeweler karat, which expresses the amount of material contained in a precious alloy, equivalent to 1 / 24 of total or material, which is the same, a 4.167%.

Thus, a piece consists of twenty-four carat gold, while an eighteen-carat has a purity of 75%.

This word has its equivalent in Portuguese as carat, in English and French, as carat, in Italian, Carat, and German, Karat.

In our language, carat is also used, usually in the plural to refer to the value or importance of some intangible quality, as in the text of the Mexican writer Gilberto Chavez Jr.

"... without daring me to consummate irremediable act, which, to some extent, rising over and perhaps call into question my male carats. "

(Word of the Day)