Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]: Category:nv:Textiles

Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]
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Category:nv:Textiles
Jul 31st 2012, 22:22


Latest revision as of 22:22, 31 July 2012

The following is a list of Navajo terms related to textiles.[edit description][edit parents]

For other languages, see table at Category:Textiles

Subcategories

This category has only the following subcategory.

W

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Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]: Template:lv-adj

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Template:lv-adj
Jul 31st 2012, 22:21

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{{Latn|{{{head|{{PAGENAME}}}}}|lang=lv|face=head}} ''([[Appendix:Glossary#definite|{{#ifeq:{{{2|}}}|def|in}}def.]]'' '''{{l|lv|{{{1|}}}{{#ifeq:{{{2|}}}|def|s|ais}}}}''''', {{#ifeq:{{{3|}}}|comp||[[Appendix:Glossary#comparative|comp.]]'' '''{{l|lv|{{{1|}}}āk{{#ifeq:{{{2|}}}|def|ai}}s}}''', }}''[[Appendix:Glossary#superlative|sup.]]'' '''{{l|lv|vis{{{1|}}}ākais}}'''''; [[Appendix:Glossary#adverb|adv.]]'' '''{{l|lv|{{{1|}}}i}}''''')''{{#ifeq:{{NAMESPACE}}||[[Category:Latvian adjectives]]}}<noinclude>[[Category:Latvian headword-line templates|adj]]</noinclude>

+

{{Latn|{{{head|{{PAGENAME}}}}}|lang=lv|face=head}} ''([[Appendix:Glossary#{{#ifeq:{{{2|}}}|def|in}}definite|{{#ifeq:{{{2|}}}|def|in}}def.]]'' '''{{l|lv|{{{1|}}}{{#ifeq:{{{2|}}}|def|s|ais}}}}''''', {{#ifeq:{{{3|}}}|comp||[[Appendix:Glossary#comparative|comp.]]'' '''{{l|lv|{{{1|}}}āk{{#ifeq:{{{2|}}}|def|ai}}s}}''', }}''[[Appendix:Glossary#superlative|sup.]]'' '''{{l|lv|vis{{{1|}}}ākais}}'''''; [[Appendix:Glossary#adverb|adv.]]'' '''{{l|lv|{{{1|}}}i}}''''')''{{#ifeq:{{NAMESPACE}}||[[Category:Latvian adjectives]]}}<noinclude>[[Category:Latvian headword-line templates|adj]]</noinclude>


lv-adj (def. ais, comp. āks,sup. visākais; adv. i)

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Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]: Category:nv:Weaving

Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]
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Category:nv:Weaving
Jul 31st 2012, 22:22


Latest revision as of 22:22, 31 July 2012

The following is a list of Navajo terms related to weaving.[edit description][edit parents]

For other languages, see table at Category:Weaving

Pages in category "nv:Weaving"

The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.

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Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]: shield-toad

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shield-toad
Jul 31st 2012, 22:23

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===Etymology===

 

===Etymology===

From {{compound|shield|toad}}. Compare {{term|shelled-toad|lang=en}}, {{term|shell-toad|lang=en}}. Compare also {{etyl|fy|-}} {{term|skyldpod||tortoise|lit=shield-toad|lang=fy}}, {{etyl|nl|-}} {{term|schildpad||tortoise|lit=shield-toad|lang=nl}}, {{etyl|de|-}} {{term|Schildkröte||tortoise|lit=shield-toad|lang=de}}, {{etyl|sv|-}} {{term|sköldpadda||tortoise|lang=sv}}, {{etyl|is|-}} {{term|sjaldbaka||turtle|lit=shield-back|lang=is}}.

+

From {{compound|shield|toad}}. Compare {{term|shelled-toad|lang=en}}, {{term|shell-toad|lang=en}}, {{term|shell-paddock|lang=en}}, Early Modern English {{term|shell padde|lang=en}}. Compare also {{etyl|fy|-}} {{term|skyldpod||tortoise|lit=shield-toad|lang=fy}}, {{etyl|nl|-}} {{term|schildpad||tortoise|lit=shield-toad|lang=nl}}, {{etyl|de|-}} {{term|Schildkröte||tortoise|lit=shield-toad|lang=de}}, {{etyl|sv|-}} {{term|sköldpadda||tortoise|lang=sv}}, {{etyl|is|-}} {{term|sjaldbaka||turtle|lit=shield-back|lang=is}}.

   
 

===Noun===

 

===Noun===


Latest revision as of 22:23, 31 July 2012

Contents

[edit] English

[edit] Alternative forms

[edit] Etymology

From shield +‎ toad. Compare shelled-toad, shell-toad, shell-paddock, Early Modern English shell padde. Compare also West Frisian skyldpod ("tortoise", literally "shield-toad"), Dutch schildpad ("tortoise", literally "shield-toad"), German Schildkröte ("tortoise", literally "shield-toad"), Swedish sköldpadda ("tortoise"), Icelandic sjaldbaka ("turtle", literally "shield-back").

[edit] Noun

shield-toad (plural shield-toads)

  1. A turtle or tortoise.
    • 1956, Henry Goddard Leach, My last seventy years:
      I was particularly impressed by the, to me, exotic soups— the hot fruit soup, the chocolate soup, and particularly the thick mock turtle soup, called in Danish Forlorenskildpaddesuppe, which, literally translated means "Fake shield-toad soup."
    • 1995, Douglas R. Hofstadter, Fluid Concepts & Creative Analogies:
      Here is another example of the phenomenon: Doug: The Germans call a tortoise a SchiMkrote — literally, a "shield-toad". Carol; "Shield-toad"?! Come onl That's like' calling an eagle a "feather-cow"!
    • 2009, Nicoline Van Der Sijs, Cookies, Coleslaw, and Stoops:
      From Dutch schildpad, meaning "turtle," from schild ("shield") and pad ("toad"), so literally "shieldtoad"; adopted in the seventeenth or eighteenth century and still used regionally.
    • 2010, Hugh Peter McGrath, Michael Comenetz, Valery's Graveyard:
      But we already know that a shield-toad is a Frenchman, while the sun is Apollo's shield.

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Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]: puttynystyn

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puttynystyn
Jul 31st 2012, 22:24

Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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[[File:Buttons necklace.jpg|thumb|200px|puttynystyn (2)]]

 

[[File:Buttons necklace.jpg|thumb|200px|puttynystyn (2)]]

 

===Etymology===

 

===Etymology===

From {{etyl|la|wym}}.

+

From {{etyl|la|wym}}.[[Paternoster]]

   
 

===Noun===

 

===Noun===

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[[pl:puttynystyn]]

 

[[pl:puttynystyn]]

  +

Paternoster


Latest revision as of 22:24, 31 July 2012

[edit] Vilamovian

puttynystyn (1)
puttynystyn (2)

[edit] Etymology

From Latin.Paternoster

[edit] Noun

puttynystyn

  1. (plurale tantum) rosary
  2. (plurale tantum) necklace

Paternoster

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Top Stories - Google News: Romney stumbles on world stage but will it hit him at home? - Reuters

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Romney stumbles on world stage but will it hit him at home? - Reuters
Jul 31st 2012, 21:19

U.S. Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney delivers foreign policy remarks at the University of Warsaw Library in Warsaw July 31, 2012. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

U.S. Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney delivers foreign policy remarks at the University of Warsaw Library in Warsaw July 31, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Kacper Pempel

Tue Jul 31, 2012 5:16pm EDT

(Note: explicit language in the seventh paragraph)

By Steve Holland

WARSAW (Reuters) - Mitt Romney upset Londoners, Palestinians and U.S. journalists on his ill-fated tour abroad, but with voters focused on the economy at home it is unclear whether the Republican presidential challenger's fumbles will have a lasting effect on the November 6 election.

Romney is facing doubts about whether he can handle himself on the world stage as he tries to replace President Barack Obama.

His blunt comments on the London Olympics, Israel's culture and the status of Jerusalem showed an awkward tone and an inability to control his own message, a problem that could be magnified in the heat of the campaign's next 100 days.

Yet U.S. voters, especially in Rust Belt swing states like Ohio and Pennsylvania, care more about jobs than Jerusalem. It is not certain that Romney will pay at the ballot box for his fumbles.

"I don't think this will have a lasting impact one way or the other," said David Yepsen, director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois University. "It's certainly not going to help his goal of burnishing his foreign policy credentials. I don't think he did that. But I don't think he hurt himself either."

The trip ended on a sour note with the media on Tuesday when traveling press secretary Rick Gorka angrily admonished reporters for shouting questions about his gaffes to Romney at a memorial to the late Pope John Paul II in Poland.

"Kiss my ass. This is a holy site for the Polish people. Show some respect," Gorka said.

A saving grace for Romney may be that his sojourn took place during a summer down period with Americans more interested in their vacations and the Olympic Games than the presidential campaign.

As the United States winds down its foreign wars and frets about its debt, deficit and high jobless number of more than 8 percent, voters are paying little attention to global matters.

Fewer than 10 percent of people surveyed in regular polls by Reuters/Ipsos over the last 21 months have named foreign affairs as the biggest problem facing the United States.

The number fell to 5 percent in the last poll in April, compared to 46 percent who mentioned the economy.

ROMNEY IMAGE STILL BEING SHAPED

Still, images like Romney being rebuked by British Prime Minister David Cameron for doubting London's Olympic readiness, do not help the former Massachusetts governor convince Americans he is ready for the White House.

"It is clear that the opportunity to credential his beliefs with the American voters was nothing short for Mitt Romney of an embarrassing disaster on this trip. So, the notion somehow that this trip and its impacts don't matter, I think is one of the craziest things that has been said along the course of this trip," said Obama campaign adviser Robert Gibbs.

Romney has more of a need to be careful about voters' perceptions of him than Obama does because Americans are still making their minds up about the Republican. Roughly one in five voters does not have an opinion yet about Romney.

"Romney has an opportunity to change views of him to a larger extent than does the president. There are a large number of people who are still not decided what they think about Romney. Virtually everybody has an opinion of what they think of the president," said Peter Brown of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute.

Romney's advisers had debated whether he should leave the United States at all at a critical moment of the campaign when he is running nearly even with Obama in polls by pounding a relentless message that the U.S. economy under the Democratic incumbent has been a failure.

Taking him out of the country for a week effectively muzzled Romney from this message.

On Tuesday, he waved off criticism of his comments about the economies and cultures of Israel and the Palestinians, which he made in Jerusalem at a fund-raising breakfast that raised more than $1 million from a crowd of mostly Jewish-Americans.

"I'm not speaking about it, did not speak about the Palestinian culture or the decisions made in their economy. That's an interesting topic that deserves scholarly analysis, but I actually didn't address that -- certainly don't intend to address that in my campaign," he told Fox News.

Romney's missteps exposed some weaknesses in his campaign. After controversy swirled around him for days, it was only on Tuesday that the campaign produced a sustained response, when it sent senior strategist Stuart Stevens to talk to reporters.

"I think this trip was a great success," he said, riding in a motorcade vehicle with several reporters as Romney went to a wreath-laying ceremony at a Warsaw monument.

Republicans pointed to Romney's unabashed support for Israel as having the potential to peel some Jewish-Americans away from Obama -- particularly in swing state Florida -- and energize evangelical Christians who have had doubts about whether Romney is conservative enough.

"There were some unforced errors but no lasting damage," said Republican strategist Mark McKinnon. "And he solidified his Jewish base."

In a week when Newsweek magazine asked on its cover if he was too much of a "wimp" to be president, Romney objected to news media coverage of his gaffes and portrayed himself as dealing with major global issues head on.

"I realize that there will be some ... who are far more interested in finding something to write about that is unrelated to the economy, to geopolitics, to the threat of war, to the reality of conflict in Afghanistan today, to nuclearization of Iran," Romney told Fox News.

(Additional reporting by Sam Jacobs in Washington and Eric Johnson in Chicago; Editing by Alistair Bell and Cynthia Osterman)

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Top Stories - Google News: Romney trip may not matter much to voters in November - CNN International

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Romney trip may not matter much to voters in November - CNN International
Jul 31st 2012, 21:13

  • Mitt Romney's trip to England, Israel and Poland includes diplomatic gaffes
  • Analysts say U.S. voters care about the economy, not foreign policy
  • The trip was an "embarrassing disaster" for Romney, an Obama adviser says
  • Friends are talking about the Olympics, not the Romney trip, one man says

Washington (CNN) -- Mitt Romney's high-profile trip to England, Israel and Poland featured cheering crowds, iconic settings and forceful speeches, but may be remembered more for diplomatic gaffes.

Whether any of it will matter when American voters choose between Romney and President Barack Obama three months from now is less clear.

The six-day trip to key U.S. allies that ended Tuesday was intended to burnish the foreign policy credentials of the former Massachusetts governor and help him galvanize support from the Republican Party's conservative base.

However, an early stumble when Romney questioned London's readiness for the Olympics, followed by remarks in Israel that angered Palestinians, created a story line that persisted through the trip.

Political analysts said the Romney trip's impact on voters would likely be negligible, though the gaffes prevented him from getting all the benefit he sought.

"The good news for him is that Americans care about economic issues," said Doug Bandow, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute in Washington. "From that standpoint, burnishing his foreign policy credentials doesn't matter much."

Polls showed Americans favored Obama over Romney on foreign policy issues before the trip, and that won't change because of anything that happened overseas, Bandow told CNN on Tuesday.

Wendy Schiller, a political science professor at Brown University, said a mistake or two by Romney won't undermine his campaign but could raise doubts about his readiness to replace Obama in the minds of some swing voters.

"If they contribute to a nagging perception that something is not right or different, then it can hurt you in November," Schiller told CNN.

A major question was whether Americans were paying attention. Omekongo Dibinga, a rap artist and motivational speaker, said his friends were focused on the Olympics rather than the Romney trip.

"Nobody's talking about this in my circle," said Dibinga, a frequent contributor to CNN iReports.

As Romney headed home from Poland on Tuesday, the Obama campaign skewered his trip as a failure and a waste of valuable campaign time.

Romney failed to clearly assert his foreign policy positions and instead limited many of his stops to brief photo opportunities with foreign leaders, argued senior Obama campaign adviser Robert Gibbs.

"Every day that you run as a challenger to an incumbent president, you are auditioning for the role of president of the united states and internationally as commander in chief," Gibbs said. "It is clear that the opportunity to credential his beliefs with American voters was nothing short for Mitt Romney of an embarrassing disaster on this trip."

A top Romney adviser rejected such criticism.

"I think it was a great success," Stuart Stevens told reporters after Romney gave a speech Tuesday in Warsaw. "The idea is that, can people get a good sense of who he is? Can people listen and see that this is a person speaking from the heart about Israel and about Poland? And he is."

Romney's troubles began on his first day in London when he told NBC that some Olympic security and labor issues were "disconcerting."

Prime Minister David Cameron later noted that organizing the Olympics in a world capital was much more difficult than in the "middle of nowhere," a clear shot at the Salt Lake City Games headed by Romney, while London tabloids went on the attack with one headline reading "Mitt the Twit."

"This isn't high-level diplomacy; it's basic manners 101," Schiller said. "You don't insult your host, and that's what he did."

In Israel, Romney delivered a major foreign policy speech aligning himself rigidly with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but outraged Palestinians leaders by calling Jerusalem the undisputed capital and later saying the economic disparity between Israelis and Palestinians was due in part to "culture."

Palestinian negotiator Sa'eb Erekat called Romney's culture statement racist, a charge that Romney denied Tuesday in an interview with Fox News. Insisting his comments were not specifically about the Palestinian culture, Romney said that "the choices a society makes have a profound impact on the economy and the vitality of that society."

Stevens, the Romney campaign official, said the magnitude of the November election would overshadow any temporary focus on criticism of Romney during the trip.

"This has not been a race that's been affected by small things at all," he said. "And I think it means absolutely nothing to people at home because it has no relevance to their life. It doesn't matter."

The Cato Institute's Bandow agreed, saying that Romney's blunders, while embarrassing, "don't really hurt him."

For example, the trip to Israel was "a play for the Jewish vote," so insulting Palestinians caused no harm, Bandow said.

"This doesn't matter much that he said a stupid thing, which he did," Bandow continued, adding that the controversy with the Palestinians "probably detracted a bit, but in terms of which group matters more -- Arab Americans or Jewish Americans -- the answer is Jewish Americans."

Schiller of Brown University said that Obama's strong support from Jewish voters in 2008 would be replicated this year, regardless of whether Romney visited Jerusalem.

"There's always a maximum of maybe 25-30 percent of Jews who really vote Republican," she said.

As to whether Romney's insult of Palestinians might hurt him in November in Michigan, which has large Muslim populations in some areas, Schiller said it didn't matter because, she predicted, Obama will win the state anyway.

CNN's Jim Acosta, Rachel Streitfeld, Kevin Liptak, Gregory Wallace and Ashley Killough contributed to this report.

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