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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 24 2006 at 13:54
 HOW CAN YOU PUT GENESIS & YES IN THE SAME CATORGORY AS THE BEATLES??
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Atkingani View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 24 2006 at 20:11

Originally posted by ginnyman ginnyman wrote:

 HOW CAN YOU PUT GENESIS & YES IN THE SAME CATORGORY AS THE BEATLES??

They're not... Beatles are categorized as a proto-prog band, a very special sub-genre while Yes and Genesis are included in Symphonic Prog, a real progressive sub-genre.

Guigo

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 25 2006 at 18:44
Originally posted by Atkingani Atkingani wrote:

Originally posted by Majestic_Mayhem Majestic_Mayhem wrote:

Originally posted by Atkingani Atkingani wrote:

The grammar-checking program is a great tool but it helps little in my first language: Portuguese.

A simple regular verb like 'andar' (to walk) has 56 single different forms (not counting the composed and reflexive forms) and we have to memorize them all at school.

Andar here means to move about/ move forward.. thats nice.. actually some of  our words are spanish sounding (philippines was colonized by the spaniards for more than 300 years) we have words like: Lababo (sink ie kitchen sink) Lamesa (table) Abre lata (can opener) Abre botelya (bottle opener) and others...

Portuguese & Spanish: andar; Italian: andare; French: aller... all have the same origin: the good old Latin, a great language.

Portuguese and Spanish are close but not so close as many people think. The language that's closer to Portuguese is the Gallego, spoken in Galiza, Northern Spain. Some say that Gallego is a dialect; but the main differences between language and dialect are ships and guns.

P.S.: the language you talk I believe to be the tagalog. Am I sure?

yes siree!


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