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I
don't know spanish :o(
so
what did she really say? If it's too bad use the @%#%$%^#@^ symbols,
please.
When my dad was teaching my mother Spanish,
he was teaching her bad words. She was taking citizenship class and the
teacher asked my mother to take care of the class while she stepped out. As
soon as the teacher left, the class was buzzing. My mother, very
authoritatively, told the class to "Callense el osico," thinking she was
telling them to be quiet. She said you could hear a pin drop, and someone told
her what she had really said. Marge:)
On Jan 5, 2006, at 5:35 PM,
Joseph Puentes wrote:
John Gonzalez wrote:
If you would like to see some of the beautiful eyes in
Jalisco, where people are complimented for having "Ojos Tapatios", go
to gdlclub.com go the section titled : Editoriales, Especiales and and
move your pointer down to "Ojos Tapatios," click there and you will
see beautiful "Ojos Tapatios".
Cool. I looked
and saw that some of the men were shown (truthfully the women were my choice
for the most beautiful). . .so do men have Ojos Tapatios
tambien?
well I'm not so sure I have them but I am pretty sure I have
Dientes Cazacanes/Tepecanos/Tepehuanes:
http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~grobbins/huh.html/color>
Colotlán
(Northern Jalisco)./fontfamily>
Colotlán can be found in Jalisco's northerly "Three-Fingers" boundary area
with Zacatecas. This heavily wooded section of the Sierra Madre Occidental
remained beyond Spanish control until after the end of the Chichimeca War.
It is believed that Indians of Cazcan and Tepecanos origin lived in this
area. However, this zone became "a refuge for numerous groups fleeing from
the Spaniards." Tepehuanes Indians - close relatives to the Tepecanos - are
believed to have migrated here following their rebellion in Durango in
1617-1618.---taken from John Schmal's Jalisco Indigenous in 16th Century
article/fontfamily>
Also there is
something peculiar or different about the way people from Jalisco speak
Spanish. This author seemed to think it was worth writing a dissertation
about the subject:/fontfamily>
TI: EL ESPANOL DE JALISCO:
CONTRIBUCION A LA GEOGRAFIA LINGUISTICA HISPANOAMERICANA AU: CARDENAS-DANIEL-NEGRETE/color> DN:
PHD DD: 1953 SN: COLUMBIA-UNIVERSITY (0054) PG: 387 LA:
ENGLISH SU: Language-and-Literature-Linguistics (0588) SO: VOLUME 14-01/color> OF DISSERTATION
ABSTRACTS INTERNATIONAL. PAGE 137. NO: AAI0006588
And finally i
can remember people frequently referring to me as a "Cabezon." Well most
times it was my Mom. So there must be something special about my head from
Jalisco that is different too! She even mentioned my "Osicote" a few times
while saying a few things about being a "Tarugo" and that she was tired of
my "pendejadas". . .I remember one time she must have been confused thinking
I was Chinese because she called me a "hijo del V-chi."
How about
folks from Zacatecas or Aguascalientes. . .do you all have special or
unusual Eyes, Teeth, Tongues or Heads?
Anyone ever call you an Orejon
or Narizon or Flaco or Peludo or Barbado or
???
joseph
YAHOO!
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