T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
356.1 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed May 13 1987 10:20 | 4 |
|
These are palindromes. Try topic 193.
JP
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356.2 | Thanks | MLNIT5::FINANCE | | Wed May 13 1987 12:38 | 6 |
| MLNOIS::HARBIG
Thank you John.
You have a good old Ligurian and more specifically
Genoese name.
regards,
Max
|
356.3 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed May 13 1987 12:43 | 5 |
| Re .2:
And what derivation would you give the name "Finance"? :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
356.4 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed May 13 1987 12:49 | 8 |
|
Yeah, I knew the name was Genoese, even more specifically, Napolitano
(I'm told that in Naples, "Parodi" is as common as "Smith" in America).
What is Ligurian? "Ligure: a triditional precious stone that is probably
the jacinth" doesn't seem to fit."
JP
|
356.5 | LIGURIA | MLNIT5::FINANCE | | Wed May 13 1987 13:31 | 29 |
| MLNOIS::HARBIG
Re .3
yes Steve it does sound a bit pretentious
but it's the area where the notes are situated
on the Milan machine.
Re .4
Liguria is the area of Italy which stretchs
down from the French Border at Ventimiglia
to Tuscany on the West Coast.
It's a fairly narrow strip and was famous as
one of the two medieval Maritime Republics of
Italy the other being Venice and they were
pretty constantly at war with one another.
It is, or was, pretty effectively cut off and
thus protected from the rest of mainland Italy
by the Maritime Alps which continue as the
Appenines.
The main city is Genoa where Columbus' family
came from.
As to the name it is very Genoese and i don't think
our Genoese Branch Manager Pietro Parodi would
like it much if someone called him a Neopolitan.
Maybe the people who have told you they have
seen the name Parodi on signs in Naples are
referring to companies connected with shipping
since the Genoese practically have the monoply
of shipping in all Italian ports.
Max
|
356.6 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | | Wed May 13 1987 18:22 | 12 |
| There is a small town near here called Entrevaux, with rather
impressive fortifications because of a history of several hundred
years of war with the town of Puget-Theniers, about 6 miles away.
When we went to visit the fortifications, we had to get the
keys from a rather talkative old lady, and when she heard the name
Monahan, she recognised it as Celtic, and told us all about how
that area used to be inhabited by the Ligurian Celts before the
Romans came.
So either she was even more batty than she seemed, or Liguria
used to reach a little further West.
|
356.7 | | BISTRO::TIMMER | Rien Timmer, Valbonne. | Wed May 13 1987 19:17 | 7 |
| "Ligurians" is the name of the pre-Indogerman population of
South-East Gallia and North-West Italy (the Rhone valley, Provence,
Western Alpes and Italian Riviera). They have probably moved there from
Africa via Spain. They never raised themselves above the level of
primitive agriculture. From their language nothing remains but a
number of place and personal names ending in -asca.
|
356.8 | | MLNIT5::FINANCE | | Thu May 14 1987 04:51 | 9 |
| MLNOIS::HARBIG
I was referring to the modern Italian
region of Liguria.
.6 and .7 are both right.
In fact part of the now French Riviera was
ceded to France for their help in the Italian
Wars of Independence 1850-70 circa.
In fact, I think, Garibaldi was a native of Nice.
Max
|
356.9 | This note is here under false pretences :-) | IPG::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading-UK | Thu May 14 1987 08:44 | 4 |
| MODERATOR: Please change the title of this note to "A Ligurian
parody", or similar. It certainly contains not one single acrostic.
Jeff.
|
356.10 | HELP! | 49257::FINANCE | | Fri May 15 1987 11:52 | 11 |
| mlnois::harbig
Re .9 I think you're right Jeff but
in the meantime is there " a very
clever genius" (as Sam Goldwyn said)
out there who could explain to a
squirming noter what an Acrostic is ?
Also Chiasmus would be helpful as I
don't have access to an English
Dictionary here.
Max
|
356.11 | It's puzzling | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Fri May 15 1987 19:41 | 12 |
| According to Webster's New World, an _acrostic_ is "a verse or
arrangement of words in which certain letters in each line, such as the
first or last, when taken in order spell out a word, a motto, the
alphabet, etc."
An _acrostic puzzle_ is a crossword-like game where the first letters
of the answers to clues spell out (usually) a writer's name and
the subject of a quote from the writer. All of the letters from the
answers spell out the quote itself when rearranged in the crossword
structure.
Bernie
|
356.12 | Go ask Alice... | HARDY::KENAH | and shun the Furious Ballerinas. | Mon May 18 1987 14:38 | 18 |
| Probably the best example of an acrostic verse is the dedication
of Lewis Carroll's "The Hunting of the Snark". The poem was written
to Gertrude Chataway, another child-friend of Dodgson's (besides,
of course, Alice Liddell).
Anyway, the poem was made up of four verses of four lines each. Each
line of the poem began with a letter of Gertrude's name. In addition,
each verse of the four began with the words "Girt, Rude, Chat," and
"Away", like so:
Girt... Rude... Chat... Away...
E U H A
R D A W
T E T Y
As a poem, it's okay. As an example of the form, it's a masterpiece.
andrew
|
356.13 | More on acrostics | MACNAS::MGRAHAM | As user-friendly as a cornered rat | Fri Apr 05 1991 15:50 | 41 |
| One of the most intersting Acrostics was found during excavations at
Pompeii and in Cirencester (England). It can be read left to right,
right to left (or even upwards and downwards). It is in fact a mixture
of an acrostic, a word square and a palindrome:
SATOR
AREPO
TENET
OPERA
ROTAS
It may be translated "The sower, Arepo, guides the wheels with care."
It may have been used for persecuted Christians to recognize one
another. The word "TENET", at the centre of the acrostic, forms a
cross and the acrostic's letters can be rearranged in that shape viz:
P
A
T
E
R
P A T E R N O S T E R
O
S
T
E
R
while the remaining letters (two A's and two O's) can be placed at the
ends of the cross to represent Alpha and Omega.
The letters can also be arranged to make a prayer:
"Oro Te, Pater; oro Te, Pater; sanas" - "I pray to Thee, Father; I
pray to Thee, Father; Thou healest".
Extract from "The Oxford Guide to Word Games" by Tony Augarde
Mike
|