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  #31  
Old 03-22-2009, 10:53 PM
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Originally Posted by Targan
Here in Perth is common for suburban back yards to contain a variety of deadly beasties, mostly snakes and spiders. Actually its mostly the snakes that are deadly around here (red back spiders usually won't kill an adult human). Over east they have funnelweb spiders that will kill you dead. Most Australians are aware of the dangers of snakes in back yard wood piles and sheds. Nasty way to go.

Now mountain lions, wow, that's a whole other deal. Cool and a bit concerning at the same time. Same goes for bears. I think bears seem like pretty impressive creatures but I wouldn't like to be attacked by one. You have some scary fauna in the CONUS.

Wild pigs over here are called razorbacks and they can get pretty darned big. Over the years a few people have been killed by male red kangaroos, they can disembowel you if you're not careful.
Ugh, I'd be afraid to visit Australia with the poisonous snakes and such, I hope the hospitals have anti-venin. I know we have our share, here in Pennsylvania, we have timber rattlers although they are more in rural areas, also we have copperhead snakes. My friend had a pet copperhead himself. Spiders, well, of course you have the Black Widow but some do say they are overrated unless you are really allergic to them. There are Brown Recluse Spiders, but they usually do not live up here, it is too cold although sometimes they can hitch a ride from the South in the warmer parts of the year. They have nasty bites and I've seen personally on what they can do when one of my co-workers showed me his bite.

BTW, Mom's side, German and Swedish although my grandmother said we might have Irish in us somewhere but I cannot confirm that. Dad's side, Russian, Russian Jew and Serbian, my last name is Serbian in origin.

Chuck M.
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Old 03-22-2009, 11:03 PM
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BTW, Mom's side, German and Swedish although my grandmother said we might have Irish in us somewhere but I cannot confirm that. Dad's side, Russian, Russian Jew and Serbian, my last name is Serbian in origin.

Chuck M.
Jeez, on my Mom's side, who knows? The Nazis put her whole village in a concentration camp in 1940, when she was only 3 years old, and she was the only member of her family to get out alive. The camp records show an ID number and her origin (Stanisicz, Croatia, which is now 20 miles inside of Serbia), but not her name. Franciscan monks gave her a name, since she didn't remember what her name was; "Helene" is French, while I suspect that "Horvath" is something that the monks thought sounded Croatian (though it's not). From some of the few memories she has from before the Germans came, I strongly suspect she was originally Croatian Muslim; from some of the rituals she remembers her parents doing, I also suspect she might have had some Gypsy somewhere in there. But who knows?

There is a firm in the US that will, for $150, send you a packet of swabs and test tubes so you can swab the inside your mouth. In a month, they will have used mitochondrial DNA to chart out your family's origins back up to 200,000 years. I hope to do that for her one day; it won't tell her any family names, but will give her an idea of where her ancestors are from.
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  #33  
Old 03-22-2009, 11:14 PM
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Jeez, on my Mom's side, who knows? The Nazis put her whole village in a concentration camp in 1940, when she was only 3 years old, and she was the only member of her family to get out alive. The camp records show an ID number and her origin (Stanisicz, Croatia, which is now 20 miles inside of Serbia), but not her name. Franciscan monks gave her a name, since she didn't remember what her name was; "Helene" is French, while I suspect that "Horvath" is something that the monks thought sounded Croatian (though it's not). From some of the few memories she has from before the Germans came, I strongly suspect she was originally Croatian Muslim; from some of the rituals she remembers her parents doing, I also suspect she might have had some Gypsy somewhere in there. But who knows?

There is a firm in the US that will, for $150, send you a packet of swabs and test tubes so you can swab the inside your mouth. In a month, they will have used mitochondrial DNA to chart out your family's origins back up to 200,000 years. I hope to do that for her one day; it won't tell her any family names, but will give her an idea of where her ancestors are from.
My last name is a muddled up version of the original Serbian name, so I'm not sure what my exact name is. I could have other stuff floating in me as well, some even suggested that maybe I could have some Greek in my somewhere. That test does sound interesting, going back to 200,000 years. Sometimes I wonder if I have "UFO roots," I have trouble going back past 1880 although on Mom's side I can get close to 1850. I knew one guy on Fidonet, the old BBS system, who could trace his family history back to 600 BC in ancient Babylon.

As to Irish origins, some do say the Irish and Basques do share DNA types so it is possible they came from the Basque region a long time ago and went north. I've also heard of "black Irish" where some have dark, black hair although they say that came from Spanish sailors who settled there after the British wiped out their fleet in 1588.

Chuck M.
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  #34  
Old 03-23-2009, 12:22 AM
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I knew one guy on Fidonet, the old BBS system, who could trace his family history back to 600 BC in ancient Babylon.

Chuck M.
Chuck, I don't want to be rude but that guy was a liar. Almost no one on this earth can trace its ancestry to such an old time. At most you can trace it back to 800 A.D.

A question, nevertheless. Was he of Asian descent? Asians can trace their ancestry further than Westerners. Nevertheless, the world record for Family history remain that of Confucius (China) and that goes back to his birth around 550BC.

Paul, do you know that website? It might interest you.
http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/jasenovac/

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  #35  
Old 03-23-2009, 10:28 AM
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It is not entirely impossible to trace family records IF the family had records or there was a means at the time and their survived. To date we have traced all of the branches of my family to before they came to the New World, the oldest confrmed was a tax collector in Paris in the 15th Century and one of his younger sons was the first to come to the New World where he worked with or for some Jesuits. From there it was easy since the family didn't leave the area they settled in for several hundred years.

Oh yeah, if your family is lazy and doesn't move for several generations then it is pretty easy to trace them as well
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  #36  
Old 03-23-2009, 10:52 AM
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The male line of my family were the Sheriffs of Renfrew (in Scotland) during the 1400s, then became the Barons of Craigievar. Makes it kind of easy to trace.
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Old 03-23-2009, 12:26 PM
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Originally Posted by jester
It is not entirely impossible to trace family records IF the family had records or there was a means at the time and their survived. To date we have traced all of the branches of my family to before they came to the New World, the oldest confrmed was a tax collector in Paris in the 15th Century and one of his younger sons was the first to come to the New World where he worked with or for some Jesuits. From there it was easy since the family didn't leave the area they settled in for several hundred years.

Oh yeah, if your family is lazy and doesn't move for several generations then it is pretty easy to trace them as well
You are very much right Jester. However, the thing is that no record had been kept in the western world prior to 800AD (Carlus Magnus). You might get some older records if your ancestry is from Constantinople but I'm not even sure about that. Records might have existed before the destruction of Alexandria's great library but all that is lost and no proof of it remains.

Several European leaders pretended to be heir to some pre-christ famous leaders but all that has always been lies and fantasy on their part. Actually, even if someone effectively has records of previous ancestry, you can be sure that it is a fake (but it may be a very ancient fake). I have worked on fakes from around 1000AD and that is a lot of fun just to know that the piece of history you are working on is the result of some kind of forgery.

I have a friend who can trace her ancestry back to a Bishop that lived sometime around 900AD but that is fairly rare.

A few Muslims can trace it back to about 600AD (to Mahomet, in fact). That's how we know that king of Morocco and king of Jordan are heirs to the prophet.

Asian, both Japanese and Chinese, can go back a lot further as they have retained some very old record. Still Confucius remain the oldest family tree in existence.
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  #38  
Old 03-23-2009, 02:22 PM
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You are very much right Jester. However, the thing is that no record had been kept in the western world prior to 800AD (Carlus Magnus). You might get some older records if your ancestry is from Constantinople but I'm not even sure about that. Records might have existed before the destruction of Alexandria's great library but all that is lost and no proof of it remains.

Several European leaders pretended to be heir to some pre-christ famous leaders but all that has always been lies and fantasy on their part. Actually, even if someone effectively has records of previous ancestry, you can be sure that it is a fake (but it may be a very ancient fake). I have worked on fakes from around 1000AD and that is a lot of fun just to know that the piece of history you are working on is the result of some kind of forgery.

I have a friend who can trace her ancestry back to a Bishop that lived sometime around 900AD but that is fairly rare.

A few Muslims can trace it back to about 600AD (to Mahomet, in fact). That's how we know that king of Morocco and king of Jordan are heirs to the prophet.

Asian, both Japanese and Chinese, can go back a lot further as they have retained some very old record. Still Confucius remain the oldest family tree in existence.
I would also suggest that some small primative cultures many who have an oral tradition of passing down stories and liniage could do a good job. As well as I said families who have lived in a small community that has been more or less isolated who have a cemetary that is maintained and....it is even better if there are is a church record.
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  #39  
Old 03-23-2009, 05:13 PM
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I would also suggest that some small primative cultures many who have an oral tradition of passing down stories and liniage could do a good job. As well as I said families who have lived in a small community that has been more or less isolated who have a cemetary that is maintained and....it is even better if there are is a church record.
Oral tradition is how Alex Haley found his ancestors in Africa in Roots.
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Old 03-23-2009, 08:45 PM
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Originally Posted by Targan
The male line of my family were the Sheriffs of Renfrew (in Scotland) during the 1400s, then became the Barons of Craigievar. Makes it kind of easy to trace.
Somewhere in the mix, I'm decended from the Count of Magdeburg in Germany. Right at the openning of the Prussian war, the count secretly sent his sons away to keep them safe as he could see the turmoil about to occur. A short while later he chose the wrong side and met with a "hunting accident".
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Old 03-23-2009, 08:51 PM
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Somewhere in the mix, I'm decended from the Count of Magdeburg in Germany. Right at the openning of the Prussian war, the count secretly sent his sons away to keep them safe as he could see the turmoil about to occur. A short while later he chose the wrong side and met with a "hunting accident".
The family story on the Mulcahy side is that (as the O'Mulcahys), my forebears left Ireland in a hurry, as "criminals." A British soldier tried to rape my forebears' wife, and he caught the British soldier in the act, grabbed a battleaxe, and took his head off. Thus, the start of the Mulcahys in the US (or colonies at the time).

I don't know how true it was, but its the story on that side of my family.
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Old 03-24-2009, 03:20 AM
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Registering the ancestors of each one here in Europe could be tricky. As Jester said, the main source of the most accurate registers is the church. Other types of early registers exist, with some notable outstanding examples, like the Domesday Book ordered by William the Conqueror. But the image of your soul burning in hell for all the eternity could have a tremendous punitive power without the need to use any other enforcement method. Nobody wants to stay apart from the church... Well, let me correct myself, I' been unfair. In the dark times of the Early Middle Ages, living near a church had it's own advantages and not only for the soul. A good number of decree granted a certain security near a church, at marked days. And the churches become the logical centers of the future villages, their inhabitants trying find themselves a little more secure under the shadow of a cross, the only true authority that could restrain the new, rising feudal nobility. At least, this was the way it happens in Catalunya,the southern Frankish territories.


So the most part of old registers were in hands of the catholic church. Fine, but sometimes it has proven disadvantages. I think that the generation of my father is the first generation of Catalans (and Spanish) without living a war in their own territory. And churches, in modern times, have been targets, a way to directly hurt the local population. Burning churches, in my territory, has been a sport practiced by Spanish, French and Catalan (Thirty years war, Spanish Succession war, Napoleonic Wars, Spanish Civil War....etc, etc...). And some of these conflicts (specially the Spanish Civil War) implied a good quantity of anti religious feeling in one of the parts and he churches turned to be a symbol of oppression.The obvious result is that a lot of registers has been lost...Some families have take advantage of the lost of these registers, taking it as a new starting point and creating themselves a new genealogy and thus adding more confusion to the general picture. I'm sure that if all the coat of arms exhibited in some Spanish houses were true, the entire country must have die from starvation long time ago...


And Europe is a place full of exceptions and special cases. My second surname (from my mother) is basque... Even their language is not indo-european! A new obstacle to keep track of my roots, for example.
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Old 03-24-2009, 03:24 AM
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And Europe is a place full of exceptions and special cases. My second surname (from my mother) is basque... Even their language is not indo-european! A new obstacle to keep track of my roots, for example.
An MI friend who attended DLI (Defense Language Institute) told me she learned that there are two languages spoken today that appear to have no other languages related to them: Basque and Navaho. (And no, they're not related to each other, either.)
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Old 03-24-2009, 05:26 AM
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Churches were indeed a target but that also how we came to have some very nice fortified churches (very common in certain regions). Marc, you also forgot about the war of religions, french revolution and the various revolutions that spread from it.

The problem with family name is that they are fairly recent except for the nobility. Up to the 18th century most people were registered without family name:
Paul son of Peter and Magdalena, born on the 4th days after easter. Brought to god by Paul and Mary (and that's when you are lucky).

Then, when civil registration became mendatory, family name were added much in the way they were for slaves.
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Old 03-24-2009, 09:10 AM
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Churches were indeed a target but that also how we came to have some very nice fortified churches (very common in certain regions). Marc, you also forgot about the war of religions, french revolution and the various revolutions that spread from it.

The problem with family name is that they are fairly recent except for the nobility. Up to the 18th century most people were registered without family name:
Paul son of Peter and Magdalena, born on the 4th days after easter. Brought to god by Paul and Mary (and that's when you are lucky).

Then, when civil registration became mendatory, family name were added much in the way they were for slaves.


Further;

The evolution of language, pronunciation, coupled with illiteracy and misspelling would cause names to change. And then translated from one language to the other, or just spelling it phoneticaly, and that is how our family name changed when we came to the U.S. because here the sound starts with "W" and not the "OUE"

And again the evolution of languages and spelling. Anyone try reading things written in their original form from the 16th Century, or how about from the 10th Century.
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Old 03-24-2009, 10:20 AM
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Further;

The evolution of language, pronunciation, coupled with illiteracy and misspelling would cause names to change. And then translated from one language to the other, or just spelling it phoneticaly, and that is how our family name changed when we came to the U.S. because here the sound starts with "W" and not the "OUE"

And again the evolution of languages and spelling. Anyone try reading things written in their original form from the 16th Century, or how about from the 10th Century.
I know my grand father was the only one to retain his original name among his family. A clerk made a mistake and the state always refused to admit it despite proofs and legal documents. Became a problem when his father died.
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Old 03-24-2009, 02:36 PM
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And again the evolution of languages and spelling. Anyone try reading things written in their original form from the 16th Century, or how about from the 10th Century.
I tried unsuccessfully to read Beowulf in Old English. Absolute failure. I had a teacher in 8th grade that played a tape of someone reading it in Old English. I understood maybe every tenth word.

That's sort of what I wonder about Star Trek -- would they really be speaking anything intelligible to us in the 21st century?
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Old 03-24-2009, 09:51 PM
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That's sort of what I wonder about Star Trek -- would they really be speaking anything intelligible to us in the 21st century?
Totally different situation now compared to mediaeval times. We have audio and audio visual recording now, not to mention widespread literacy - slows down language drift.
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Old 03-24-2009, 10:40 PM
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And they've got handheld translators.

That, and it's essential to the plot everyone understands each other...

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Old 03-24-2009, 11:28 PM
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Totally different situation now compared to mediaeval times. We have audio and audio visual recording now, not to mention widespread literacy - slows down language drift.
On a slightly different tack, I've also heard that about human evolution -- that with modern medicine and culture we've short-circuited the human physical evolution process and we are no longer evolving physically.
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Old 03-25-2009, 12:12 AM
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Totally different situation now compared to mediaeval times. We have audio and audio visual recording now, not to mention widespread literacy - slows down language drift.
You right and, as a result, the level of information losses have increased tremendously (at the historical level). Because of that, we only keep the final draft and lose a large amount of information. Not to mention our inhability to access previous materials and the fact that these equipments break down.

One thing happen in France a few years ago that illustrate that perfectly. A commando broke in a major tax collector office in charge of controling vineyards nationwide. The commando stole all the hard disks from the computers. As a result, all informations were lost and the tax office was unable to get the informations back. The reason is simple, nobody was making paper copies anymore. A few years ago, that same commando would have had to steal at least three paper copies from three different locations.
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Old 03-25-2009, 05:16 AM
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Totally different situation now compared to mediaeval times. We have audio and audio visual recording now, not to mention widespread literacy - slows down language drift.
Mmmmm... I dont' really think that your appreciation is totally right. Language drift exists, and this is specially true for the non-hegemonic languages. One important cause for the language drift is the coexistence between different languages in the same geographical areas, and the demographical balance between their speakers. The english language used in Australia is hegemonic and without important competence, but the future evolution of, per example, the english spoken in the south of the United States, with its daily coexistence with the spanish, could be very different. Of course, the same is true about the spanish talked in Mexico or in the southern states.

Catalans are sometimes specially sensitive to the matter of language drift. We mainly consider ourselves a nation without state, being inside Spanish state. Our language have not the same protection as the Spanish nor the same demographical weight (we are now about 7 millions). The influence of the spanish language is strong, specially due to the media, and the adoption of spanish terms is sometimes inevitable. At long term it can cause such an important drift that the the survival of our language is uncertain. I know that my point of view can seem somewhat "provincial", in my little corner of the world. But some of us have a day to day struggle to keep unnecessary variations of catalan at minimal to transmit it to our children. We have the conviction that a language implies more than words and grammar. So, language drift is day-to-day matter. Happily, catalan enjoys a good health in Internet.
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Old 03-25-2009, 06:07 AM
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I remained at the information level (especially as I misunderstood some of the point made by Targan ) but Marc perfectly illustrated his point. I have the same concern than him as I wish to see my daughters learn some "Provencal". I am from Wallon decent (my parents) and I already lost that.

The problem with my daughters learning "Provencal" is that, despite government official position, it is fairly hard to find teachers.

And, Marc, I don't find your position to be "provincial" in any way as I'm convinced that some kind globalisation is only possible if we preserve the local cultures as well. Catalonia is a good exemple of that. The current mistake is to play one against the other (IMO, of course).
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Old 03-25-2009, 09:22 AM
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I remained at the information level (especially as I misunderstood some of the point made by Targan ) but Marc perfectly illustrated his point. I have the same concern than him as I wish to see my daughters learn some "Provencal". I am from Wallon decent (my parents) and I already lost that.

The problem with my daughters learning "Provencal" is that, despite government official position, it is fairly hard to find teachers.

And, Marc, I don't find your position to be "provincial" in any way as I'm convinced that some kind globalisation is only possible if we preserve the local cultures as well. Catalonia is a good exemple of that. The current mistake is to play one against the other (IMO, of course).
Agreed. I wish to occitans and provençals the best of lucks in keeping your language with all of its dialects alive. I know your situation is difficult, but it seems that the future may be better. For Catalans, Provença and specially OccitÃÂ*nia are like distant cousins. Or not so distant. The occitan has been considered in our new statute of autonomy as co official language, as the occitan is spoken in one of our regions (Val d'Aran).

I remember the first time I were in OccitÃÂ*nia with my wife. We crossed the Pirenees on foot, from Berga to Montsegur, covering the 200 km of the Chemin des Bonshommes. Once in Montsegur, we became somewhat disappointed when we discover the limited presence of the occitanian in day-to-day life. I suppose we have the innocent hope that the old ties have prevailed across the Pirennes, despite the state borders and that we could ask in catalan and being answered in occitan . It was upsetting to have the feeling to be able to read and understand some of the troubadour poems in "lingua d'oc" of their historical heritage better than some of the locals. A useful warning for us to keep our language in use.

Anyway, in our second visit to France (a route from Carcassone to Cahors) we have a pleasant chance to find and visit a school were the children were educated in occitanian. You still have a chance to keep these languages alive.
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  #55  
Old 03-25-2009, 10:21 AM
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Originally Posted by Marc
Anyway, in our second visit to France (a route from Carcassone to Cahors) we have a pleasant chance to find and visit a school were the children were educated in occitanian. You still have a chance to keep these languages alive.
I do agree. This was achieved not so long ago (something like the late 80's) for every regional language. However, it should be allowed in public schools but this is more difficult. The law grants that right to all regions. You'll even have teachers around. However, you need to be really motivated if you want the minister to recognize the right for these teachers to teach in public schools. Then, if one of your kid wants to present a regional language as a second language to final examination it's equally difficult for them. They have the right to have a regional language as second language but most academy will not grant them the right to pass the exam (on the ground that there are not enough teachers). The problem with France is that we have tons of laws and only apply a small part of them. Still we are a bit further ahead than you but that's normal we started earlier.

That's like women issue in France. I recently discovered that the same rights have been granted to women and men since 1946 through our constitution (in all maters). Still we are far from achieving that in every day life. The military has granted them access to all position only in the late 1990's, they remain under paid. None of our political party grant them the legal quorum... 62 years that France (Liberté Egalité Fraternité), country of human rights, does not even comply to its own constitution.
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  #56  
Old 03-25-2009, 11:25 AM
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My previous point applies just as much to Catalan as it does to any other language including English. Widespread literacy combined with audio and audio-visual recording would help any and all languages survive. That is logical and obvious, surely?

The issue of a minority language being swamped by a majority neighbouring language due to, say, the majority language being the only one used in broadcast media or minority languages receiving poor official recognition and protection is a separate issue. Having said that I also want to point out that I wholeheartedly agree with recognising and protecting individual languages and cultures.
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  #57  
Old 03-25-2009, 03:29 PM
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The issue of a minority language being swamped by a majority neighbouring language due to, say, the majority language being the only one used in broadcast media or minority languages receiving poor official recognition and protection is a separate issue. Having said that I also want to point out that I wholeheartedly agree with recognising and protecting individual languages and cultures.
I agree. That's why I said I misunderstood your point hé hé.
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  #58  
Old 03-26-2009, 05:20 AM
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Widespread literacy combined with audio and audio-visual recording would help any and all languages survive.
Bon dia!

I agree totally in this point, too. But it would not prevent any language to suffer the normal (and quick in some places) evolution. Spanglish is a good example of very quick fusion of two strong, quiet different and healthy languages.


Mmmmm...St Patricks day must be a very long day...
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  #59  
Old 03-26-2009, 07:05 AM
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Mmmmm...St Patricks day must be a very long day...
I would guess that would depend on how much you had to drink...
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  #60  
Old 04-03-2009, 09:28 PM
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Originally Posted by Mohoender
Chuck, I don't want to be rude but that guy was a liar. Almost no one on this earth can trace its ancestry to such an old time. At most you can trace it back to 800 A.D.

A question, nevertheless. Was he of Asian descent? Asians can trace their ancestry further than Westerners. Nevertheless, the world record for Family history remain that of Confucius (China) and that goes back to his birth around 550BC.

Paul, do you know that website? It might interest you.
http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/online/jasenovac/
He was from the Middle East, probably from the Iraq region since he did bring up Babylon. I'm a little skeptical myself although I guess there could be some form of records perhaps.

Chuck M.
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