Originally posted by hedgehog
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Alphabet associations - I
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hedgehog
Elvira Colonnese as Queen Isabella in this:
Delia Reinhardt, hmm haven't been able to sniff out that Isabella yet, maybe someone else can?
Edit: Got it, she premiered the role of Isabella in Milhaud's Christopher Columbus.
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Originally posted by hedgehog View PostElvira Colonnese as Queen Isabella in this:
Delia Reinhardt, hmm haven't been able to sniff out that Isabella yet, maybe someone else can?
Edit: Got it, she premiered the role of Isabella in Milhaud's Christopher Columbus.
werry werry good - have a virtual saucer of milk ............... and the J
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hedgehog
Originally posted by mercia View Postwerry werry good - have a virtual saucer of milk ............... and the J
A man, a maid, and a Cuban dance are all what J?
To help things along:
The J is an English word so translations from Czech, Spanish and Russian will be needed.
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amateur51
Originally posted by hedgehog View PostMilk is not good for hedgehogs I've been told! I don't think there are any statistics on wine however
A man, a maid, and a Cuban dance are all what J?
To help things along:
The J is an English word so translations from Czech, Spanish and Russian will be needed.
I have some urgent knitting to attend to
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hedgehog
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostUnusual notion of help.
I have some urgent knitting to attend to
Ok: A man in a chorus, a maid in a song, and a Cuban dance are all what J?
nr 1 Czech composer
nr 2 Russian composer
nr 3 Cuban composerLast edited by Guest; 17-01-14, 14:01.
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so J is some English word, which when translated into Czech, Russian and Spanish features in the names of works concerning respectively a man, a maid and a dance by respectively Czech, Russian and Cuban composers
should I translate 'man in chorus' into Czech, 'maid song' into Russian, 'Cuban dance' into Spanish ?
[the surname of the man who invented the cha-cha-cha happens to begin with J but I guess that is completely irrelevant]
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hedgehog
Originally posted by mercia View Postso J is some English word, which when translated into Czech, Russian and Spanish features in the names of works concerning respectively a man, a maid and a dance by respectively Czech, Russian and Cuban composers
should I translate 'man in chorus' into Czech, 'maid song' into Russian, 'Cuban dance' into Spanish ?
[the surname of the man who invented the cha-cha-cha happens to begin with J but I guess that is completely irrelevant]
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Originally posted by hedgehog View PostMilk is not good for hedgehogs I've been told!
A man, a maid, and a Cuban dance are all what J?
To help things along:
The J is an English word so translations from Czech, Spanish and Russian will be needed.Ok: A man in a chorus, a maid in a song, and a Cuban dance are all what J?
nr 1 Czech composer
nr 2 Russian composer
nr 3 Cuban composer[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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hedgehog
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostNo - it causes dreadful diar ... diohrrh ... dhia ... It gives them the shits. (As does cream with cats - so never put a cat in your scone.
If I understand correctly, we're looking for a word like "jolly" which features in the "czap vollissche" chorus in Smetacek's cantata "Mein elde papa ist ein Mülleimer Mann", the "веселый девушка" folksong from the Ukraine arranged by Ami Amievich Calibansky, and Heitor Aston-Villa's "danza alegre" from the "400 Piano Pieces" Op 98234?
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