Showing posts with label Trivia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trivia. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

San Fermin bull-run gore count; Hug, Kiss, Steal; Granada mayor tells teen girls 'nearly naked' looks best; One thing Left & Right agree on; More Spanish speakers in USA than Spain

Click here or on the individual links below for my latest Spanish stuff on Newsvine.


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Busted: Gang of thieves who hug and kiss victims

Spain's national police have broken up an organized band of thieves using hugs and kisses to distract victims.  Authorities have charged nine people in various cities across the country with using a technique called 'abracitos' ('little hugs') to commit robbery. The me …



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US now has more Spanish speakers than Spain – only Mexico has more

The United States is now the world’s second largest Spanish-speaking country after Mexico, according to a new study published by the prestigious Instituto Cervantes. The report says there are 41 million native Spanish speakers in the US plus a further 11.6 million who ar …

Thursday, March 19, 2015

How many public holidays does Spain have?

Today is a public holiday in Madrid. (Or as my British friends say, a 'bank' holiday.)

It's Father's Day and Saint Joseph's Day. (Or as my Spanish neighbors say, Día del Padre / Día de San Jose.)

This is a regional holiday, not a national one.

A family member back in Louisiana commented recently that Spain sure had a lot more holidays than the USA. It seemed that way to me, too, so I thought I'd tally them up and compare. Well, it turns out that this year there are 10 federal holidays in the USA, but only 8 national holidays in Spain.

Still, that doesn't quite tell the whole story.

First of all, here are the US federal holidays for 2015:

Thursday, January 1 New Year’s Day
Monday, January 19 Birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Monday, February 16 George Washington’s Birthday / Presidents' Day
Monday, May 25 Memorial Day
Saturday, July 4 Independence Day (Observed on Friday, July 3 this year)
Monday, September 7 Labor Day (Always on the first Monday in September)
Monday, October 12 Columbus Day
Wednesday, November 11 Veterans Day
Thursday, November 26 Thanksgiving Day (Always on the 4th Thursday of November)
Friday, December 25 Christmas Day

Now here is the list of national holidays in Spain for 2015:


Thursday, January 1 New Year’s Day
Tuesday, January 6 Kings Day / Epiphany
Friday, April 3 Good Friday
Friday, May1 Labor Day
Saturday, August 15 Assumption of Mother Mary
Monday, October 12 Spanish National Day
Tuesday, December 8 The Day of the Immaculate Conception
Friday, December 25 Christmas Day


Notice that because the USA's July 4th holiday falls on a Saturday this year, it will be observed on Friday July 3rd, but that in Spain there is no such compensation for the holiday that falls on Saturday August 15th. This is because Spain actually considers Saturday a work day. Thus, people like me who work Monday through Friday won't get that holiday off this year.

This year we in Spain are also missing a holiday that falls on a Sunday: Constitution Day, December 6th. When a holiday falls on a Sunday, the Spanish sometimes do what the Yanks do, and observe the holiday on the subsequent Monday. Although Spain is not doing that with this year's Constitution Day, some of the country's Regions have come to the rescue and christened the Monday a holiday. 

Therefore, it looks like the USA actually has more public holidays than Spain – especially when you consider that in the USA both Saturday and Sunday holidays are always compensated for.

Wait, though—there is another factor to consider. Each of Spain's 17 Regions have their own holidays. For example, there are four Regional holidays for the Community of Madrid this year:

Thursday March 19 - Saint Joseph's Day
Thursday April 2 - Holy Thursday
Saturday May 2 - Community of Madrid Day
Thursday June 4 - Corpus Christi Day

And the other Regions are just as  generous, with almost all having four other public holidays falling Monday through Friday. (Only the Canary Islands Region has fewer: three.) In fact, this year several of the Regions have elected to give their citizens back the Constitution Day some in Spain are missing by observing it on the Monday. (Scroll down below for a list of all the Regional holidays in Spain.)

Now back in the USSA, many states also observe their own holidays, but most have only one or two of these. Nevertheless, only two of the 50 states seem to have matched the Spanish regional norm of four: Indiana, which observes Good Friday, Primary Election Day, General Election Day and Lincoln's Birthday and North Carolina, with Good Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve and the day after Christmas.

So, if we consider the fact that added to the 8 (usually 9) national holidays there are four regional holidays almost everywhere in the country, it looks like overall Spain pulls ahead on the total number per year.

Then we can throw city and town holidays into the mix. In Spain most of these have multiple local holidays and even small towns and villages often have one or two. For example, in the City of Madrid there are 3 in 2015:

Friday, May 15 - Saint Isidro Day (Patron Saint of the City)
Wednesday, September 9 - Santa Maria de la Cabeza Day (Saint Isidro's wife)
Monday, November 9 - The Virgin of Almudena Day - (Patroness of the City)

Barcelona has two:

June 1 - Saint John's Night
September 24 - Día de la Merced

Valencia also has two:

January 22 - Saint Vincent The Martyr's Day
April 13 - Saint Vincent Ferrer's Day

And Seville has two, too:

Wednesday April 22- Wednesday of the Spring Fair (Replaces the usual May 30th Saint Fernando holiday, which falls on a Saturday this year)
Thursday June 4 - Corpus Christi Day

Now, I don't know of too many American cities that have two or three local public holidays.

Conclusion: I think we can safely say that, yes, Spain does have more public / bank holidays than the United States.

Or to put it in sports terms: Spain 14, USA 10.

Happy holidays!

Carlos

Here are the 2015 public holidays in Spain's Autonomous Regions.
Andalusia
February 28th: Andalusia Day
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Aragon
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
April 23rd: Saint George’s Day
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Asturias
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
September 8th: Asturian Regional Day
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Balearic Islands
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
April 6th: Easter Monday
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Basque Country
March 19th: Saint Joseph
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
April 6th: Easter Monday
July 25th: Saint James
Canary Islands (Only 3 holidays regional holidays in the Canaries!) 
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
May 30th: Canary Islands Day
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
Cantabria
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
April 6th: Easter Monday
September 15th: Patron Saint of Cantabria (Virgen de la Bien Aparecida)
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
Castilla-La Mancha
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
April 6th: Easter Monday
June 4th: Corpus Christi
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Castilla y León
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
April 23rd: Castile and León Day
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Cataluña
April 6th: Easter Monday
June 24th: Saint John's Day
September 11th: The Diada, Catalonia Regional Day
December 26th: Saint Stephen's Day
Ceuta
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
September 25th: Festival of Abraham’s Sacrifice
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Extremadura
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
September 8th: Extremadura Regional Day
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Galicia
March 20th: Day after Saint Joseph's Day
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
July 25th: Saint James, Galician Regional Day
November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day
La Rioja
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
April 6th: Easter Monday
June 9th: La Rioja Regional Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Comunidad de Madrid
March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
May 2nd: Community of Madrid Day
June 4th: Corpus Christi Day
Melilla
March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
September 25th: Festival of Abraham’s Sacrifice
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Murcia
March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
June 9th: Murcia Regional Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
Navarre
March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day
April 2nd: Holy Thursday
April 6th: Easter Monday
July 25th: Saint James
Valencia
March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day
April 6th: Easter Monday
October 9th: Valencian Regional Day
December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day

Thursday, November 27, 2014

¡El diabólico ingenio de su malvado plan es magnifico!

I just wanted to write down the Spanish translation of one of my favorite lines from Star Trek. It's from the Bride of Chaotica (La Novia de Caótica) episode of Star Trek Voyager. And it sounds just as great in Spanish as in English, IMO.

"The clever fiendishness of your evil plan is brilliant!" = "¡El diabólico ingenio de su malvado plan es magnifico!"

Monday, May 20, 2013

Yo Quiero = I Do: A Look at Marriage in Spain Today


Marriage in Spain is a pretty popular state. Indeed, over half of all Spanish adults are married. However, marriage rates have been falling since the financial crisis began in 2008. The year before saw the country's marriages dip below 200,000 for the first time in ages -- to 199,660 marriages to be exact -- and the rate has been falling ever since. The most recent statistics available are from 2011, during which 158,220 Spaniards married.

Wedding Costs

Weddings in Spain have traditionally been huge affairs, with massive parties held after the ceremony to allow all the friends and family of the happy couple to celebrate their big day. In this time of recession even wedding budgets are facing cutbacks though, and last year the average amount spent on the whole wedding fell by 8.3% to €13,190. There is a lot of variation between the most and least expensive weddings, with Madrid weddings costing most, and those in the Canary Islands being among the least costly. The areas where most savings are being made tend to be honeymoons and receptions, with many couples choosing not to take an expensive holiday after their wedding. Today, with recession hitting Spain hard and unemployment rates soaring to over 27%, it’s unsurprising that wedding budgets are feeling the pinch. Another possible result of the financial hardship in Spain at the moment is that the average age for women to marry for the first time has risen from around 25 years in 1991 to nearly 30 in 2008.

Wedding Tourism

Spain is also a popular destination for overseas weddings, its beautiful scenery and historic cities attracting many couples from all over Europe and the rest of the world. Many people come to Spain to marry for the sake of the traditions and customs as much as the location and weather. There are numerous overseas wedding companies who can arrange weddings tailor-made to a couple’s needs, as well as guiding them through the red tape and legal documentation. The requirements vary depending on whether a Catholic or civil ceremony is held; for a civil ceremony the requirements can be complex, and two years residency is needed. Most overseas couples opt for a Catholic wedding, or have a civil wedding in their home country and receive a blessing in Spain. Marrying abroad is often less expensive than marrying at home and couples can combine the costs of honeymoon and wedding. Special wedding insurances are available to protect the couple from disaster and are probably necessary in addition to travel insurance, which is unlikely to cover costs such as wedding dress replacement.

Same Sex Marriage
 
Spain legalised same-sex marriage in 2005, the third country in the world to do-so. The first same-sex couple to marry in Spain, Emilio Menendez and Carlos Baturin German, tied the knot just outside Madrid on July 11th 2005. In the first year of legality approximately 4500 couples married. There was some conflict at the time of legalisation, many Roman Catholics particularly disapproved of non-heterosexual unions, and the Pope called them ‘unnatural, immoral and harmful’; however the law was supported by around two thirds of the population, despite 80% of Spaniards identifying themselves as Catholic. Since 2005 there have been some legal challenges to the legalisation of same-sex marriage, notably in 2007 when the Spanish Family Forum attempted to formally define marriage as the union of a man and a woman; the motion was rejected by the Spanish Congress. Today gay couples come from all over the world to marry in Spain.

Wedding traditions

Spanish wedding traditions include the groom being escorted by his mother up the aisle, where he waits for his bride, who will be led by her father. After the vows the groom traditionally gives his bride thirteen coins in a purse; to represent a dowry and symbolise his intention to provide for her. The bride gives her unmarried female guests small pins in the shape of flowers; these are worn upside down and if they become dislodged and fall out during the reception it is said that the wearer will soon be married.

Divorce laws

Divorce was only legalised in Spain in 1981, over a century after the UK. Since then divorce laws have been reformed to rid them of the notion of a ‘guilty party’ in the marriage. Divorce rates have grown since legalisationin 2002 around 15% of Spanish marriages ended in divorce, higher than Italy but much lower than the UK, where the figure was 42.6%. Divorce rates seem to be stabilising now, possibly due to the recession making divorce too expensive for some couples. Rates of marriage have fallen sharply over the same period; halving between 1970 and 2011. This trend is mirrored throughout Europe, with similar falls in the UK. Many more Spanish couples now are choosing to live together, rather than marry, which is borne out by the numbers of babies born out of wedlock, which have soared from under 2% in 1970 to around a third of live-births in 2011. The stigma historically attached to babies born to unmarried mothers has lessened materially.

So, who knows -- once the economy straightens out, there may be quite a boom in marriage ceremonies, as couples who put off 'making it legal' for financial reasons decide to formally tie the knot.

By Melissa Hathaway (mostly) and Carloz (very little)

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Where do most tourists in Barcelona come from?


Answer: the United States of America. In fact, the year 2012 consolidated the U.S.A. as a major client of Barcelona's tourist industry. Last year American tourists totaled 635,000, or 8.5% of all travelers.

The large number of  U.S. travelers has been attributed to the rise in the number of cruise ships docking in the city, with many Americans choosing to embark here, as well as more direct flights and promotional campaigns.
 
After the Americans came the British, the group that had the most significant growth (a 12% increase), while at third, fourth and fifth were the French, Italian and German. There was a dramatic increases from residents of Eastern European countries (Czech Republic, Russia and Poland), which jumped nearly 32% in one year, while visits from the rest of the world grew by a healthy 17.6%.

That last number resulted from visitors who came from many developing countries. Looking beyond the quantity of travelers to the qualitative effect of this group, credit card spending by Russians grew by a dramatic 55.7% last year, for a total of 146.7 million euros. Among Chinese tourists this spending leaped by 71.4%.

When it comes to Americans, there is the added bonus that this market is reportedly one of the most profitable for the city, in terms of the average amount of money they spend daily.

In 2012 the tourism sector rose 0.7% overall, with 7.44 million people visiting Barcelona, of which the majority were international visitors and 21.8% were from other parts of Spain. Visits by Spaniards decreased last year by 6.8%. 

Barcelona's position among international travelers has allowed the tourism industry to withstand the effects of Spain's economic crisis. In 2012 the city ranked fourth among European destinations in length of hotel stays, after London, Paris and Rome respectively.

Related post: Barcelona loves, loves, loves tourists - especially when times are hard!
 

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Did you know the Alhambra was a popular board game? Probabaly didn't if you're Spanish.

Most Spaniards unaware of popular board game based on one of their country's most emblematic sites.

In Spain you can find all kinds of things named Alhambra: travel agencies, driving schools, pastries, even a famous beer brand. That's understandable since the Alhambra palace fortress, a symbol of the city Granada and one of Spain's most popular tourist sites, is known throughout the world, and Spaniards are rightly proud of it. What few Spaniards are aware of, however, is that it has inspired one of the most popular board games in Europe. While Alhambra the game flies off store shelves in places like Germany, France and the Nordic countries, it currently has no distributor in the land of its namesake.

“In Spain many people have held the license for Alhambra, but nobody has kept it very long” Haritz Solana, spokesman for Asmodee, the game's last Spanish distributor, explained to the El Mundo newspaper recently.

“It's funny, because it's a game that has won game of the year several times, with more than seven extensions, but it does not work here. We sold 500 units on the first run and little else.”

Alhambra is a classic board game, with cards, but no dice, in which players must collect materials to construct the monument and take turns to build it step by step. The game, which can be played by up to four people and can last hours, has received at least half a dozen international awards. It is one of a series of Alhambra themed pastimes produced by Queens Games.

Its creator, Dirk Henn, a German with a love of and fascination for Granada, has just developed another game carrying the name of the city itself. Granada can be combined with Alhambra, which makes the competition last much longer, because you not only build the palace, but the city around it. A video game version of Alhambra was in development, but has been indefinitely postponed.

Juan Cruz who owns Freak Mondo (Shorn Freak), the only store that sells the board game in Granada, told El Mundo, “At Christmas I sold the last three that I had. Now I have one sample and if anyone wants one, I have to order it from Germany. Though there's not much interest. I had to take it out of the store window because my regular clients took it as a joke.”

While on first sight it may invite some chuckles among Spaniards, what with the box bearing images of exotic Ottoman looking domes and Arabs wearing turbans and slippers with curled-tips, Cruz thinks if they gave it a chance they would appreciate it

“I understand that is was developed with a Central European audience in mind,” explained Cruz, “but when you play it, being from Granada and knowing the monument, you realize that it has been designed by someone who knows and likes the site.”

However, Asmodee spokesman Solana added that “there is no culture of modern board games, in Spain. Yes, there is a love of traditional games, but among the youth there is no interest in more recent board games. To start with there is the weather, so in Spain they hang outside with friends. And when something did take hold, it was the video console.”

The three best-selling board games in Europe are the The Settlers of Catan, Carcassonne and the Alhambra, according to Solana.

“Here Alhambra sells nothing, or very little – not even among [board game] aficionados.”

Cruz is more direct and attributes the lack of interest to “a certain snobbery, a shame that we seem to have when something successful has to do with our city. Yes, it is true that in recent years, because of the [economic] crisis, people have been buying more games, because if it costs 20 euros, and you go in on the purchase with four or five people, then you can tire yourself out playing and buying sodas without spending much. But the Alhambra has a curse.”

The Alhambra cursed? Well, the game in Spain, anyway.

You can check out how the game is played in the video review below:


Thursday, May 8, 2008

Fluff from Forbes, et al


In what some may view as a rather superficial survey, Anholt City Brands Index surveyed 18,000 people from 18 countries to come up with the world's Ten Most Stylish Cities. With both Madrid and Barcelona ranking up there, Spain was one of only two countries that scored two cities on the list. (Australia was the other one.)

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Yes, it may just be a bit of fluff, but I'm sure it's stuff that tourist boards love to have published about their cities. And as a loyal “Spaniard by choice,” I had to post something about it here.
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My current home, Barcelona, came out at number 6 among the top ten and my former home, Madrid, claimed a double achievement: number 10 on the overall list and number 4 on the list of cities “that made the most important contribution to the world.” (The top five cities and their contributions on this other list were Milan for fashion, Washington D.C. for politics, Madrid for culture, and Tokyo for technology.)
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According to a report about the list by Nicola Ruiz that appears in Forbes.com, "cities were judged on lifestyle, buzz, multiculturalism, cultural life and attractiveness. Respondents, for example, were asked to rank 40 cities on climate and weather, pollution and the physical attractiveness of buildings and parks. They were asked how warm and welcome they expect the people of each city to be, and how important each city's contribution to the world has been over the last 30 years in the areas of science, culture and government.”
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She then goes on to list the, “Capitals Of Cool.” Here's some more of what she wrote, along with scattered comments by me:
1. London, UK London landed atop the list in part because almost one-third of the world's population (including those in Australia, India and Canada) has ties to the British Commonwealth and consider London the financial, fashion and music capital of the world. The announced 2012 Olympics also gives it a stylish stamp of approval. The Spice Girls and David Beckham may have both benefited from Tony Blair's Cool Britannia campaign in the late '90s, positioning London as cool, hip and happening, but it's also the city's history, multiculturalism and wealth that send it to the top of the Most Stylish Cities list. "The only downside to London is its safety and expense," says Simon Anholt, who conducted the City Brands Index survey. "But these two factors also help its image: If it were too safe, people wouldn't find it as exciting, and if it were cheaper it would get less respect."
So, that's why neither Barcelona and Madrid made it to number one – they're too safe and not as outrageously expensive as London! Has anyone ridden the tube lately? It's a ridiculously expensive low quality ride.
2. Paris, France While Paris came in second, Anholt says it's done less to deserve this elite spot than other cities. With no notable new buildings going up since the Arche de La Defense 20 years ago, and few new crowd-pleasing events of late, Anholt says that Paris, like Rome and Milan, is riding on its reputation. "It's almost cliché that Paris is one of the most stylish cities," he says. "It's burned into the global, popular culture. Particularly in developing countries, people expect that in Paris they'll get the best food and fashion as well as a chic lifestyle. It could turn into an awful place for many years and it still wouldn't lose that reputation."
OK, so Paris rated number two because it's a cliché that's been branded onto the collective consciousness. I couldn't agree more! I've been to Paris a few times and, let me just say, I don't feel a need to go again.
3. Sydney, Australia "Sydney's been very clever in the way it's been able to create an image that's more sophisticated than just kangaroos and the Outback," says study author Anholt. "The opera house helps suggest that there's high culture, classy cuisine and night spots, but it was the 2000 Olympics that really put it on the map. It's been a textbook case of how to make a virtually unknown city in the middle of nowhere into a mega brand."
I've never been to Sydney, but I hope to visit someday.
4. New York, U.S.A. "If you live outside of the U.S., New York is perceived as being the capital of the U.S.," says study author Simon Anholt. "The East Coast city isn't blamed for the U.S. foreign policy; Washington D.C. takes the heat for that. New York encapsulates everything that has always been wonderful about America." "No other city has so much artistic, musical, business and entertainment talent, all in one place," says Philip Kotler, professor of international marketing at Northwestern University and author 40 books on place marketing." Anyone who says they are bored in New York is hopeless."
I've been to New York a few times and, let me just say, I don't feel a need to go again.
5. Rome, Italy "The charm of Rome comes from the Italian style of life," says Philip Kotler, professor of international marketing at Northwestern University and author of 40 books on place marketing. "This city's high level of style is encapsulated in the art, food, music, beauty and history."
I'm embarrassed to say that I've lived in Europe for almost 10 years and I've never been to Rome. I hope to go soon.
6. Barcelona, Spain "Much like Sydney, Barcelona received a tremendous amount of attention after it hosted the 1992 Olympics," says study author Simon Anholt. "It has a very distinctive architectural style from the Gaudí architecture to the amazing cathedral La Sagrada Familia. Having a visual icon is incredibly important and that seems to count almost more than anything else. People like a visual image to attach to memories in their minds."
Go BCN!
7. Melbourne, Australia "Melbourne is the city that Australians rank highest in the world--they rank Sydney second and London third," says study author Simon Anholt. "Melbourne is the one that people simultaneously admit to knowing least about but liking most. In fact, it would appear that the only thing they know about it is that it's a city in Australia, but this fact is sufficient to rank it seventh place."
If someone understands this quote, please live a comment.
8. Berlin, Germany "Berlin is perceived as being stylish and in recent years has earned a reputation for being a trend setting city," says study author Simon Anholt. "It has youth appeal, great nightlife and a strong youth culture."
I've been to Berlin a couple of times and liked it a lot. Too cold in winter, though!
9. Amsterdam, Holland "Amsterdam is a very rare example of a city that has a more powerful brand than its country ... usually it's the other way around," says Simon Anholt, author of the study. "Amsterdam is all about sex and drugs and rock 'n' roll, and it works hard to keep that reputation. Amsterdam is one of a small handful of cities that I think passes the cool T-shirt test. 'I heart Amsterdam' on a plain white T-shirt would sell for more than if it were just a plain white T-shirt."
I've been to Amsterdam a couple of times and liked it a lot. Too cold in winter, though!
If someone understands the cool T-shirt test, please leave a comment.
I'm sort of repeating myself, aren't I? Only one more city to go.
10. Madrid, Spain "Madrid is one of the more visited cities in the index," says...Anholt. "People know it and visualize the city and its residents easily." Adds Philip Kotler, professor of international marketing at Northwestern University and author of books on place marketing, "It has wonderful parks and museums, culturally there's a lot of pride in the people in Madrid."
Viva Madrid!
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And that rounds out this stylishly superfluous list.
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OK, g2g 'cuz I'm meeting up with a few trig international friends at one of Barcelona's chic Span-Asian fusion sushi/tapas bars before going to “The Revolution Will Be Fabulous!” exhibit of designer Che-wear at the Barcelona Fashion Museumatoruim. (It's a fund raiser for the Style-Conscious Conservation Fund -- a very worthy, and stylish, cause.) Then we'll have dinner at this marvelous organic seafood restaurant called “La la” that has it's own seaweed garden, where you can watch your side-dishes grow. After that it'll be dessert at a trendy gourmet churrería, which serves piping hot low-fat churros that have been flavorfully enhanced with exotic ingredients like chili, ginger, coriander, along with au courant drinks like coconut milk latte with a sprig of something or other. We'll probably close the evening off at a smart little seaside bar called “El el” that specializes in Absinthe martinis, served to a reggaeton synthonic chill-up beat in a retro op-art environ. So, peace out from 6 of 10! (Oh, that's the new Barcelona designation.)
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Hasta luego amig@s,
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Carloz
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P.S. Like most on-line periodicals, Forbes.com has a section beneath its articles where readers can leave comments. A couple of commenters thought Hong Kong should have been included on the list. You can view the whole article, and even leave a comment there yourself, by clicking here. Photos and quotes about each of the top 10 cities can be found here.

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Trivial Spain


Can you choose the correct answers to the 20 questions below?
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1. The official name of the country is
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A. Spain
B. The Republic of Spain
C. The Kingdom of Spain
D. The Spanish Federation of Autonomous Communities
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2. In Spain the film "The Sound of Music" goes by the name of
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A. Tu y Yo (You and I)
B. El Sonido de La Musica (The Sound of Music)
C. Sonrisas y Lagrimas (Smiles and Tears)
D. Maria y El Capitan (Maria and the Captain)
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3. A small part of Spain is located within
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A. Morocco
B. France
C. Portugal
D. Italy
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4. With an average altitude of 660 meters, Spain has the ____ highest average altitude of any country in Europe.
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A. 15th
B. 5th
C. 22nd
D. 2nd
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5. In the year 1600 the largest city in Spain was
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A. Segovia
B. Madrid
C. Toledo
D. Seville
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6. Spain has ____ Autonomous Communities.
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A. 32
B. 12
C. 15
D. 17
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7. Which Autonomous Community contains the cities of Cadiz, Granada, Malaga and Seville?
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A. Andalusia
B. Extremadura
C. Castile and Leon
D. Castile La Mancha
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8. How many Autonomous Communities consist entirely of islands?
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A. 6
B. 2
C. 0
D. 3
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9. Madrid, the capital of Spain, is located in which Autonomous Community?
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A. Madrid
B. Castile La Mancha
C. Castile and Leon
D. Andalusia
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10. Where was Pablo Picasso from?
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A. Catalonia
B. Andalusia
C. Murcia
D. Guernica
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11. Which dance originated in Andalusia?
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A. Tango
B. Merengue
C. Salsa
D. Flamenco
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12. Spain used to be
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A. ruled by Muslims.
B. a Republic.
C. an empire.
D. all of the above.
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13. The Canary Islands are in the
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A. Mediterranean
B. Sargasso Sea
C. Atlantic Ocean
D. Caribbean
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14. The Canary Islands were named after
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A. dogs
B. birds
C. a rich Spanish family
D. None of the above
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15. Salvador Dalí was
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A. Catalan
B. Andalusian
C. Galician
D. Basque
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16. Spain has a Parliament and
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A. a President of the Government.
B. a Prime Minister.
C. a Chancellor.
D. A and B.
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17. In the 19th century Spain fought wars with
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A. Britain
B. France
C. the USA
D. B and C
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18. There
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A. is one language that is official throughout all of Spain (Castilian Spanish).
B. is a total of four official languages in Spain: Castilian Spanish throughout the country and three languages that are co-official in their respective Autonomous Communities (Catalan, Basque and Galician).
C. are four unofficial regional languages (Asturian, Aragonese, Aranese and Valencian).
D. All of the above.
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19. Tomatoes, potatoes, avocados, tobacco and cacao
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A. were all brought to Europe and then spread around the world by the Spaniards.
B. are all words that were adopted by the English language from Spanish.
C. All of the above.
D. None of the above.
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20. The cities with the largest populations in Spain, from largest to smallest, are
.
A. Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Seville, Zaragoza
B. Madrid, Barcelona, Seville, Valencia, Zaragoza
C. Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Zaragoza, Seville
D. Madrid, Seville, Barcelona, Valencia, Zaragoza
.
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