strange shaped countries
Tuesday, March 22nd, 2022 03:38 amOpening the Worldle page,
staring at the strange shape and wondering what (in heck) country it could be,
thinking a few minutes,
then typing in a guess...
and getting it right on the first try is such a rush of glee.
Sometimes getting it right on the 2nd or 3rd (etc) try is also a rush of glee.
Other times, it's a country I thought I was familiar with, but would've sworn its outline didn't look like that.
.
Today someone on my current team at work said I looked familiar (from my profile photo I guess, as we haven't done any video meetings... unless he worked in the same office before it got closed down... which is also possible) and asked if I went to the university (which I did go to) and if I was in the Engineering building (which I was). He graduated a couple years after me and thinks he remembers seeing me in the halls.
How is that even possible!? Remembering someone's face from 27ish years ago, someone you only saw in passing however many times? Especially if the recognition is on the basis of comparing those memories to a single profile photo of me taken 20 years later!?? If so, he must be one of those super-face-recognizers.
I can barely remember someone's face right after I see it.
staring at the strange shape and wondering what (in heck) country it could be,
thinking a few minutes,
then typing in a guess...
and getting it right on the first try is such a rush of glee.
Sometimes getting it right on the 2nd or 3rd (etc) try is also a rush of glee.
Other times, it's a country I thought I was familiar with, but would've sworn its outline didn't look like that.
.
Today someone on my current team at work said I looked familiar (from my profile photo I guess, as we haven't done any video meetings... unless he worked in the same office before it got closed down... which is also possible) and asked if I went to the university (which I did go to) and if I was in the Engineering building (which I was). He graduated a couple years after me and thinks he remembers seeing me in the halls.
How is that even possible!? Remembering someone's face from 27ish years ago, someone you only saw in passing however many times? Especially if the recognition is on the basis of comparing those memories to a single profile photo of me taken 20 years later!?? If so, he must be one of those super-face-recognizers.
I can barely remember someone's face right after I see it.
Manipur - one of the eastern-most states of India, on the border with Myanmar.
Meitei - a language and ethnic group of people in that region.
Sanamahism - a religion in that region.
The history of India is so extensive. I don't remember learning any of it in school, except perhaps a brief mention of the East India Company and Gandhi. I wonder if they teach much more of it in British primary schools?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_integration_of_India
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princely_state
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Raj
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_India_Company
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mughal_Empire
Manipuri dance, a traditional dance form, has some quite unusual-looking dresses:
Video title: Manipuri classical dance Basanta Raas
Posted by: WildFilmsIndia
Date posted: Feb 3, 2016
Meitei - a language and ethnic group of people in that region.
Sanamahism - a religion in that region.
The history of India is so extensive. I don't remember learning any of it in school, except perhaps a brief mention of the East India Company and Gandhi. I wonder if they teach much more of it in British primary schools?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_integration_of_India
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princely_state
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Raj
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_India_Company
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mughal_Empire
Manipuri dance, a traditional dance form, has some quite unusual-looking dresses:
Video title: Manipuri classical dance Basanta Raas
Posted by: WildFilmsIndia
Date posted: Feb 3, 2016
so far today .. Ethiopian dance
Sunday, April 18th, 2021 05:23 pmthings to do:
submit my taxes online (I've already done the numbers, just need to submit them)
order some things
other stuff on my to-do list maybe
catch up on TV recordings
not going to do, even though I could spend my whole life at it and never finish:
work in the yard again
what I've done:
online reading, all starting with a Nextdoor.com post.
"ball caps" - is another term for baseball caps which I've never heard before, but dates back at least to the 1940s.
honeydew - is not just a melon. It's sweet liquid in leaves, and also the excretions of insects who feed on the leaves.
Kubla Khan - His flashing eyes, his floating hair!
Habesha peoples - the video on this Wikipedia page of traditional Habesha dance and music is from 1987* and over an hour long, and I wish I could find a better quality version of it. The dance is wonderful and not quite like anything I've seen before... From what I found, it is called Eskista, characterized by rapid shoulder movements. I've found videos with other examples of it on YouTube, but none that I enjoy as much (or as impressive!) as the one on the Wikipedia page. The outfits of the women dancers look similar to me as some Native American outfits, which confused me at first.
*That Wikipedia file says 1965 but must be wrong. The TV logo shown, ETV, may be for the Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation, which didn't start broadcasting in color until at least 1979.
I found this copy of the same performance on YouTube, in poorer quality but with the name of the performance: People to People Tour part 1 of 9; it also says "1987/1988. National Theater Troupe of Ethiopia." The title is "ህዝበ ለህዝበ" (Hizb le hizb) in Amharic, so searching on that gives more results.
This page has more info:
1987 Hizb le Hizb
And this Facebook page says even more:
[I have this urge now to find every online thing that mentions this concert tour from 1987/1988, like it's a scavenger hunt to see how much info I can dig up.]
Concert poster of the tour from Berlin, East Germany
THE SHIFTING STATUS OF THE GONDAR AZMARI IN REVOLUTIONARY ETHIOPIA:FROM OUTCASTS TO POPULAR STARS (PDF)
Ethiopian Dance Troupe Fails to Appear (LA Times article, 1987/05/17)
A comment on this page by "Adamu LA" indicates that the HIZB LE HIZB group did not visit the U.S.A because of "ideological difference between eastern and western block". That makes me wonder if that is why the troupe did not show up in L.A. as mentioned by the above article. But the below article said that they performed in Washington DC, so I'm not sure Adamu's comment here is correct.
Ethiopian Dancers To Perform (PDF) - 1987/03/30 - Article from The Clark College (Atlanta) Panther. Has a lot of details. Mentions "They have already performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C."
..
I don't know much about Ethiopia, other than famine, wars, and food. There is much history that I know very little of. I didn't even know that most of the country is mountainous and based on the photos looks gorgeous.
submit my taxes online (I've already done the numbers, just need to submit them)
order some things
other stuff on my to-do list maybe
catch up on TV recordings
not going to do, even though I could spend my whole life at it and never finish:
work in the yard again
what I've done:
online reading, all starting with a Nextdoor.com post.
"ball caps" - is another term for baseball caps which I've never heard before, but dates back at least to the 1940s.
honeydew - is not just a melon. It's sweet liquid in leaves, and also the excretions of insects who feed on the leaves.
Kubla Khan - His flashing eyes, his floating hair!
Habesha peoples - the video on this Wikipedia page of traditional Habesha dance and music is from 1987* and over an hour long, and I wish I could find a better quality version of it. The dance is wonderful and not quite like anything I've seen before... From what I found, it is called Eskista, characterized by rapid shoulder movements. I've found videos with other examples of it on YouTube, but none that I enjoy as much (or as impressive!) as the one on the Wikipedia page. The outfits of the women dancers look similar to me as some Native American outfits, which confused me at first.
*That Wikipedia file says 1965 but must be wrong. The TV logo shown, ETV, may be for the Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation, which didn't start broadcasting in color until at least 1979.
I found this copy of the same performance on YouTube, in poorer quality but with the name of the performance: People to People Tour part 1 of 9; it also says "1987/1988. National Theater Troupe of Ethiopia." The title is "ህዝበ ለህዝበ" (Hizb le hizb) in Amharic, so searching on that gives more results.
This page has more info:
1987 Hizb le Hizb
And this Facebook page says even more:
Hizb le Hizb (People to People) – a 54-person collaboration of Ethiopian musicians and performers. The cultural exhibition kicked off in March of 1987 on a whirlwind tour of 60 cities around the world in 118 days. The purpose behind the creation of a ensemble to basically give a tour de force of Ethiopian music and culture throughout the world and a way to thank nations for the assistance they had provided to Ethiopia during the ‘Great’ Famine only a couple of years earlier.
Tilahun Gessese. Mahamoud Ahmoud. Bizunesh Bekele. Neway Debebe. Tsehaye Yohannes, Mulatu Astatkie. Iniye Takele. Asnaketch Worku and Maritu Legesse are among the list of topflight entertainers that the show laid claim to be the very eminence of star power on the Ethiopian music scene at the time. Never before or since has such a collection of talent been melded together to deliver what would be historical performances under the guide of Mulatu Astatke’s composition and Tadese Worku’s choreography. The ensemble itself was referred to as the Adey Abeba Traditional Music Group. From Kibur Zebegna to Police and any orchestra that could claim the best talent in the country were called up to fill its ranks.
The storyline of the exhibition is the journey of a young girl traveling through the country and being introduced to the different peoples and their culture. There is an older woman accompanying her (who may symbolize Ethiopia). The vocal delivery of the songs by this extraordinary group of musicians was simply part of the story. The standout dance and theatrical performances that accompanied them were a similarly impressive feat for the breadth and depth of cultural spread they provided. Who could forget the baby faced Iniye Takele who would – it seemed like – pretty much begin talking to herself when she really went into an iskista groove and Kuribachew Woldemariam whose transcendent beauty seemed only to shine brighter at the height of her performances.
[I have this urge now to find every online thing that mentions this concert tour from 1987/1988, like it's a scavenger hunt to see how much info I can dig up.]
Concert poster of the tour from Berlin, East Germany
THE SHIFTING STATUS OF THE GONDAR AZMARI IN REVOLUTIONARY ETHIOPIA:FROM OUTCASTS TO POPULAR STARS (PDF)
Several of the members of Fasiledes kinet actively participated in the Hizib lehizib (‘people to people’) campaign, a programme that brought together the people, cultures and traditions of Ethiopia. Thus, from May 15 to 28, 1987 the Fasiledes performed in Debre Markos, Gojjam.
... The campaign also included an international tour across fifty-two countries that spanned for four months. The tour made the artists of Fasiledes kinet known to the Ethiopian diaspora public. Some of the key performers during this tour were Eneye Takele, Abebe Belew, Yirga Dubale, Tamagn Beyene, Wasie Kassa, Abdela Hussien, and Kenubish Abebe.
Ethiopian Dance Troupe Fails to Appear (LA Times article, 1987/05/17)
A comment on this page by "Adamu LA" indicates that the HIZB LE HIZB group did not visit the U.S.A because of "ideological difference between eastern and western block". That makes me wonder if that is why the troupe did not show up in L.A. as mentioned by the above article. But the below article said that they performed in Washington DC, so I'm not sure Adamu's comment here is correct.
Ethiopian Dancers To Perform (PDF) - 1987/03/30 - Article from The Clark College (Atlanta) Panther. Has a lot of details. Mentions "They have already performed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C."
..
I don't know much about Ethiopia, other than famine, wars, and food. There is much history that I know very little of. I didn't even know that most of the country is mountainous and based on the photos looks gorgeous.
I've been reading a bit about Malta as I had only a vague idea of where it was, and knew not much else about it.
Per Wikipedia, in the past Jews and Muslims were expelled from the island, and Catholicism is now the main religion (83%) there. Yet the predominant language, Maltese, is descended from Silician Arabic (which is now extinct).
So Malta is a mainly Christian nation with an Arabic-sounding language. I wonder if there are any other countries like that.
Video title: The Sound of the Maltese language (Numbers, Greetings, Words & Sample Text)
Posted by: ILoveLanguages!
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VIv_7dMTl3g
Date posted: Nov 7, 2020
According to that video, "Good Afternoon" in Maltese is "Il wara nofs in-nhar it-tajjeb!"
I wondered what the literal translation of that was, as surely that is saying more than just "good afternoon".
But from checking the individual words in Google translate:
wara = after
nofs = half
in-nhar = in the day
it-tajjeb = the good
So it sort of means "good second half of the day", which really does simply mean "good afternoon".
.
Then I clicked on a suggested video explaining How to Roll Your R's.
My R's aren't rolling yet but maybe if I keep practicing. Once in a while, even before, I've been able to get a very short trill, but nothing sustainable.
Per Wikipedia, in the past Jews and Muslims were expelled from the island, and Catholicism is now the main religion (83%) there. Yet the predominant language, Maltese, is descended from Silician Arabic (which is now extinct).
So Malta is a mainly Christian nation with an Arabic-sounding language. I wonder if there are any other countries like that.
Video title: The Sound of the Maltese language (Numbers, Greetings, Words & Sample Text)
Posted by: ILoveLanguages!
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VIv_7dMTl3g
Date posted: Nov 7, 2020
According to that video, "Good Afternoon" in Maltese is "Il wara nofs in-nhar it-tajjeb!"
I wondered what the literal translation of that was, as surely that is saying more than just "good afternoon".
But from checking the individual words in Google translate:
wara = after
nofs = half
in-nhar = in the day
it-tajjeb = the good
So it sort of means "good second half of the day", which really does simply mean "good afternoon".
.
Then I clicked on a suggested video explaining How to Roll Your R's.
My R's aren't rolling yet but maybe if I keep practicing. Once in a while, even before, I've been able to get a very short trill, but nothing sustainable.
swirls of color
Saturday, March 14th, 2015 12:43 amThis video is so mesmerizing; from the NASA article: Global is the new local: Pollution changes clouds, climate downstream
Video title: GEOS5 aerosols
Posted by: NASA Climate Change
More here: Simulating the Transport of Aerosols with GEOS-5
via
artkouros
Video title: GEOS5 aerosols
Posted by: NASA Climate Change
More here: Simulating the Transport of Aerosols with GEOS-5
via
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Random curiosity: The original World Trade Center tower was 1368 feet tall (110 stories). Mount Everest reaches 29029 feet above sea level (21 times as high). The base camps are about 17000 feet above sea level, so even just the height difference between the base camp and the peak is about 9 WTC's high.
"Dor" movie (2006)
Saturday, July 12th, 2014 11:31 amThis is a very good movie. It's about an unlikely friendship between two women.
A movie review.
This review gets to the heart of the movie, but has more spoilers.
Early in the movie, the term "mehr" is used. In Islam, it is a payment by the groom to the bride, and is a mandatory part of a marriage contract. That Wikipedia page has more interesting info on the subject. I only mention that as I was unfamiliar with the term; religion is a very minor aspect of the movie.
The 2 Indian states shown in the movie are Rajasthan and Himachal Pradesh.
Another perhaps interesting tidbit is that in this movie, it is the non-Muslim woman who wears the headscarf/veil (see: ghoonghat), rather than the Muslim one. And that based on the above Wiki page, only 1.63% of the population in Himachal Pradesh is actually Muslim.
A movie review.
This review gets to the heart of the movie, but has more spoilers.
Early in the movie, the term "mehr" is used. In Islam, it is a payment by the groom to the bride, and is a mandatory part of a marriage contract. That Wikipedia page has more interesting info on the subject. I only mention that as I was unfamiliar with the term; religion is a very minor aspect of the movie.
The 2 Indian states shown in the movie are Rajasthan and Himachal Pradesh.
Another perhaps interesting tidbit is that in this movie, it is the non-Muslim woman who wears the headscarf/veil (see: ghoonghat), rather than the Muslim one. And that based on the above Wiki page, only 1.63% of the population in Himachal Pradesh is actually Muslim.
guess where?
Wednesday, May 15th, 2013 11:00 pmIf you've ever been a geography buff*, you'll probably enjoy this game: GeoGuessr.
* when I was as a kid, I read all the National Geographics I could find, and my idea of fun was to memorize the names and locations of all the Shetland, Orkney, and Hebrides islands.
via
andrewducker
* when I was as a kid, I read all the National Geographics I could find, and my idea of fun was to memorize the names and locations of all the Shetland, Orkney, and Hebrides islands.
via
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