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Monday, April 14, 2025

Create the names Ali or Li with knives and forks or chopsticks - Ava's Knife & Fork and Angela's Chopstick Alphabet games

 Ava's Alphabet

You can play a game with small children. and teach them to read the Roman (English and European) alphabets using knives and forks. This teaches them the alphabet. 

It also keeps children at the table with you.  This is good because it stops them getting bored. It creates rapport. It prevents them from running away colliding with waiters and restaurant patrons, disturbing diners at other tables. Or worse still, going out of doors left open or opened by incoming and outgoing guests. Then the child disappears, potentially running into traffic. I've seen this happen Worried bystanders intervene, calling the parents or carers away from the table. Much more fun to keep everybody at the table, busy, learning, creative, happy.

Now, how do you create names. Let's start with simple ones. Which are used not just by English speaking people but can also be used for Asian and Oriental people and languages, when travelling to other countries, or out to a restaurant serving ethnic food in your home city..

Li - Surname

For example, the surname Li is very common in Chinese and oriental families. It is a surname or family name. But in the orient the family name is first, as in Singapore Late Lee Kuan Yew. Li  is written differently in Chinese picture writing or Vietnamese picture writing, but transliterated into the EnglishEnglish as Li or Lee (depending on the tribe or area or country). 

AVA's Knife and fork Alphabet

I was shown the use of knives and forks to make the letters A and V by a Norwegian friend who was teaching her niece. I can't find any references to this on the internet so after adding spoons for the horzontals of the A and chopsticks for an orintal version, I first thought of naming it after myself. That goes well because it is alliterative. 

 Angela's Alphabet. But Ava's Alphabet would be even more appropriate as this uses the straight line letters, shorter letters. So maybe the knife and for version should be Ava's alphabet, and the chopstick version should be Angela's alphabet.

So, here I shall use Ava's alphabet for the knife and fork version which Ava used when I last saw her.

The Alphabet Cutlery Game - How to use Cutlery in Restaaurnats to Teach children to read letters

 V I watched with amazement and admiration as Helena showed her niece, Ava, how to turn knives and forks into letters of the alphabet. Helena was teaching 4 year old Ava how to spell her name, A, with the knife and fork tips together. Then create V. E and F. 

Helena did it first. Then Ava copied her.

Do you know how to create letters with knives and forks?





A common name in China and Vietnam is Li. Easily created with chopsticks.

Photos by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

I lay awake at night thinking it through. I kept counting how many letters you could make using the liner shape of a knife or fork. I counted sixteen straight letters. 

The other letters had circles, half circles, and quarter circles. How would you make the circle and curves? Easy, Look for items with curves on the table. 

Either draw arond theme, or place them entire., or use pieces of multiple small fruit such as grapes, strawberries, cherries, to create lines and curves,

Here is my list of letters.

Line Letters - using knives and forks 15 of them


F

H

I

K

L

M

N

T

V

W

X

Y

Z


Letters with curves (11 of them)

B

C

D

G

J

O

P

Q

R

S

U

You could also do this on planes with their cutlery.

Useful Wwebsites

https://www.policybazaar.com/plans/baby-names/2-letter-baby-boy-names/

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Sunday, April 13, 2025

How I remember the Phonetic Alphabet

 The military and police and many telephonists have to learn the phonetic alphabet. This morning I woke up early and went back to bed and tried to clear my mind and use the time by trying to remember the NATO alphabet, wwhich I learn and forget on a regular basis.

I used to type it out and keep a copy stuck into the front of my diary, in my mobile phone and before I had a mobile, and in hotels, on the wall by a fixed phone.

The current (2025) international alphabet has been changed a few times. Originally z was zero, but that got mixed up with zero hours. You can read about all the changes in a general Wikipedia article which covers the history of the alphabets used around the world. 

I'l. first list the latest international alphabet, then my latest ways of remembering it.

A - alpha

B - bravo

C - Charlie

D - Delta

E - Echo

F - foxtrot

G - Golf

H - hotel

I - india

J - Juliet

K - Kilo

L - Lima

M - Mike

N - November

O - Oscar

P - Papa

Q - Quebec

R - Romeo

S - Sierra

T - Tango

U - Uniform

V - Victor

W - Whisky

X - X-ray

Y - Yankee

Z - Zulu


A is easy. Alphabet. Bravo for remembering that.  You are a right Charlie if you forget it.

Six first or persoanl names are in the phonetic alphabet: Charlie, Juliet, Mike, Oscar, Romeo, Victor. Romeo and Juliet, are a pair, of course.

Delta is one of two geographical features. The other one is sierra.

Echo - please echo my recitation of the phonestic alphabet.

Foxtrot, golf and hotel are a threesome. I do a three-step foxtrot at an afternoon tea dance at the golf hotel.where my partner is playing golf. Foxtrot is one of two dances, foxtrot and tango.

I for India, one of the 4 placenames from all the continents. From the Americas, Y for Yankee, Q for Quebec. From South America the Spanish word sierra, and the city of Lima, which is the capital of the the country of Peru. And Latin Americn dancing, not the foxtrot but the tango.

From Europe, Italy's Romeo and Juliet. From the UK, Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet and Scottish whisky. 

From Asia there's India. 

From South Africa the Zulu.

J - Juliet, one of the five people names, and one of a pair, as in Romeo and Juliet.

K - kilo, now hthe UK has joined Europe in being metric.

Lima - one of the five placenames.

M for Mike, one of the five people names. I met him in November.

N for November, when I met Mike.

O for Oscar. One of the six personal names. Papa should have got an Oscar for playing a papa. 

Q for Quebec. Not just the Yankees in North America, but also the Canadians.

Romeo, one of the six names. He went after Juliet, ran after her, courted her. His name is after hers in the alphabet.

S for sierra, one of two descriptions of land, ending with the letter a.

T the tango dance from South America. A pair with the other dance, foxtrot.

U uniform, worn by the military, and school children.

V - Victor - a militry man, a Yankee, or a school boy called Victor in school uniform.

W - for whisky, not drunk by the military, Yankees, nor by anybody in uniform.

X for X-ray

Y for Yankees, who lieve across the border from the Canadians in Quebec.

Z for Zulus, one of the placenames.

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Italian Names Translated



Italian - English

Aida - happy

Alba - Dawn

Alberto - Albert

Alfredo - Alfred

Aldo - Donald

Alessandro - Alexander (defender of mankind)

Andrea - Andrew (the Italian is a male name)

Angelo - angel or messenger

Anita - grace

Antonio - Anthony

Arturo - Arthur

Barbieri - barber

Barone - baron

Bianca - white

Bruno - brown (referring to clothes or hair)

Carlo - Charles

Caterina - Catherine meaning pure

Cipriani - from Cyprus

Constantia - constancy

Cosimo from Greek Cosmo meaning order

Cristiano - Christian

Dante - lasting

Dario (from Latin Darius) posessing goodness

Dino - little sword (we used to have Dino's restaurant in Edgware. Several restaurants of this name are found worldwide.

Donna lady (ma donna = my lady)

Edmondo - Edmund (prosperous)

Eduardo - Edward (

Elena - bright light

Enrico - Henry /home ruler

Eugenio - noble

Fabio - bean farmer

Faust - lucky

Filippo - Philip  (loves horses)

Franco/Franceso - French

Gemma - gem, jewel

Giacomo - James

Giorgio - George (farmer)

Giulia - Julia (youthful)

Grazia - Grace

Gregorio - Gregory (watchful)

Juan - John

Juliet Julietta - child of Jove

Leo/Lenya - lion

Leonardo - bold lion (as in painter Leonardo Da Vinci)

Lennon - cape/cloak

Leopold - bold

Liliana - lily

Lorenzo - Lawrence (Laurel tree) 

Lucia/Lucan/Luciano/Ludo - light

Maria/Margherita/Mario - Mary (bitter)

Marcello - hammer

Marco (as in Marco Polo) from the Roman God of war Marcus

Marco - Mark

Maximo - greatest

Mona - lady

Nicola, Nicolò - Nicholas (the accent on the o of the Italian means emphasize that syllable) Victorious

Giorgio - George

Pascal - born on Passover

Paulo - Paul (small)

Primo - first one

Regina - queen

Ricco - Richard, powerful or strong ruler

Roma - from Rome

Romeo - pilgrim to Rome

Rosso/Rossini - red (maybe red haired)

Rosa, Rosetta, Rozalia - rose

Serena - serene

Slvatore - Saviour

San - Saint

Silvio - silver

Stefan0 - Stephen (crowned with laurels)

Teresa - harvester

Tomaso - Thomas (twin)

Valeria/Valentino - brave or strong

Violet - flower

Vincenzo - Vincent

Vito/Vittorio - Victor

I have at least ten dictionaries of baby names. 

People and Places

guida - guide

museo - museum

telefono - telephone

torre - tower

Useful Websites

https://adoption.com/baby-names/origin/italian

https://www.behindthename.com/name

https://www.oocities.org/irishkenj/givename

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Friday, April 11, 2025

Teaching English Overseas - or to incoming travellers - idioms and other idiocies

 Teaching English

I was listening to other speakers of English and I heard the idiom, by a country mile. I'm sure that would perplex speakers of Chinese (Mandarin). I have taught English for many years to O level and A level  pupils in schools, first in the UK and later in Singapore.

Cats and Dogs

I remember looking out of the window in Singapore with my English Language For Foreigners class pupils, after a lesson ended. Rain was pouring down. I said, 'it's raining cats and dogs'. 

A puzzled pupil replied, "I see cats. I don't see any dogs.'

The phrase comes from the old days of thatch roofs, when cats and dogs would sleep in the rafters or on rooftops. When it rained the thatch became slippery so the cats and dogs slipped off. To protect those underneath, large family beds had a canopy supported by four posts, called a four-poster bed. You can stay in hotels with four-poster beds in many UK hotels, especially in The Lake District, where people did and still do go for honeymoons and wedding anniversaries, and Stratford Upon Avon where people go to see buildings relating to Shakespeare and his wife Anne Hathaway.

For the benefit of one of my pupils, whose first language is Mandarin, I have been noting down and compiling a list of idioms. Here are some of my favourites.

When you are travelling, you may have to simplify your English when speaking to those who appear to be speaking English fluenty - until you use an idiom. Most idioms were originally metaphors from the mutual acitivites of speakers and listeners. But over the course of a century or more the original context has been forgotten.

Country Mile

by a country mile - a lot (distance or time - like a winding country road which is long in both distance and time)

Tenterhooks

on tenterhooks - in suspense, anxiously waiting for a decision or result (hooks used to suspend drying fabric)



  

Majestic Warehouse, Ruislip - Free Tastings and Affordable Wines



 

Majestic 

The Majestic Wine warehouse in Ruislip puts on tastings regularly. Free. Get on their mailing list to be informed.

On April  10th 2025 we tasted five wines, a sparkling, two whites and two reds. I liked them all, although I don't normally drink or like red wine.

Photo by Angela Lansbury.

We started with a British sparkling wine, Silverhand Estate Sparkling Brut, from Kent. This area of the downs is chalky (you may recall the image in your mind on hearing the song about the white cliffs of Dover, immortalised in the Vera Lynn song). Those chalk soils, which the French call terroir, like territory, are the same as the base in France's Champagne region. But the British sparkling wine is cheaper, only 18 pounds sterling a bottle, the price comes down to only 12.0 if you buy it in the Majeti Wines Mi Six, a case of six mixxed wines.

Magestic sell wines, beers, spirits, low and no alcohol beers and spirits, packets of nuts and crisps. They do deliveries, free tasting, beginner learning sessions for a low price), wines by the bottle cases of 6 or 12, and a wine club. Their premises are in England, Scotland and Wales.

Useful Websites

https://www.majestic.co.uk/stores

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majestic_Wine

https://www.u3a.org.uk/

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Angela Lansbury, author - travelling, wining, dining and learning languages. 

Blogs on travel, dress of the day, comical poetry.


Free Fun On A Fine Day - Ruislip Lido

 At Ruislip Lido.

The main entrance from the street, Reservoir Road.

Panels tell you about the birds, and the history of the lido and area.

Steps down to the waterside.

Here come the green headed ducks and other water birds.

Close up of the water birds.

Walking around the lido, level, fine for pushchairs, bikes, children, the elderly.

Guide to the bird life.

At the far side, a stile to a path amidst the trees.

We walked anti-clockwise around the water towards the sand, reminising about our past trips here. I remembed how our son had though that the sand was sugar and tried to eat a mouthful of it. He quickly spat it out in disgust.

Continuing clockwise, you reach the sandy beach, busy with families and delighted children. A feature for play is the large mock pirate ship.

Another area with water play showers.

In summer a small train runs around beyond the beach area. Beside the beach at the back are a cafe and toilets.

If you want more food and drink, you have the WatersEdge on the same street, visible from the park entrance.\

Back on the main road is the Majestic Warehouse. They stock a vast range of wines, as well as soem unusual nuts and crisps.

Useful Websites

https://www.stonehouserestaurants.co.uk/nationalsearch/london/thewatersedgeruislip/breakfast#/

https://www.stonehouserestaurants.co.uk/nationalsearch/london/thewatersedgeruislip/sunday-menu#/

Italian Placenames and Events Which Are Easy To Recall - Ponte Vecchio


I buy books on languages and do exercises on Duolingo every day. I've been studying Italian since June 2024 and like to look for easy to remember words.

 Italian Map words

baia - bay

barca - boat

costa - coast\

discoteca - disco

Frecce Tricolore - Arrows in three colours (Italian equivalent of the British Red Arrows planes which create colours in the sky. Tricolore is the three colours of the flag you can see above at the start of several of my posts.)



collina - hill

Lago - lake

mare - sea

monte - mountain

Monte Bianco - white mountain ((French Mont Blanc). In English the adjective is first, but in both Italian and French the noun is first.

ostello - hostel

pensione - guest house

Peschiera - fish pond

Ponte - bridge

Ponte Vecchio - old bridge, landmark in Florence, Italy

Ponte Vecchio. Picture from Wikipedia.


porta - door

pull - tiro

push - spingere

fiume - river

torre - tower

tricolore - three colours, as shown in the Italian flag



ufficio postale - post office

valle - valley (simply drop the y)

Vecchio - old

vietato fumare - no smoking

via d'uschita - way out

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Thursday, April 10, 2025

How To Illustrate Your Travel Articles With Out of Copyright Photos

 


Find Objects In Your Home Or Office
Take photos of items you already have. I was wodnering where to find a photo of King Charles III, not using the ones already in newspapers which are their copyright, Then I realised that i had coins and banknotes, one of which would have a picture of the king.

Another system is to select an item in your house and write a post about it. For exxample, I have suitcases in my house. I can write a blog about suitcases. Broken suitcase? Never mind, Write about mending suitcases, or how to choose a sturdy suitcase. 

I could write about suitcase keys, suitcase wheels, suitcase labels, suitcase brands, suitcase colours. Or rucksacks, shoulder bags, hidden pocked, pickpocket proof clothing, ski clothes, waterproof clothes, first aid kits. 

Languages
I have dictionaries and multi-lingual books. I can write about learning languages, or buying phrase books.

Food & Drink
I have food and drinks from all around the world. I can write about one product and factory tours of similar products.
 
Labelling Photos
One advantage of taking your own photos is that you can get them correctly labelled. 

Once or twice I have looked at a photo on my laptop of a well known landmark and wondered whether that was a photo I took, or somebody else's. If I include a member of my family in a scene, even if I don't label it as my husand at the Eiffel TOwer, or wherever, I can see that it's my photo. 

If I take something in my own home, such as a lemon, I can remidn myself that it is mine, and maybe solve a potential dispute, if I use something from my own kitchen, such as a tablecloth and plate.

I have some old photos which are useful, but without sufficiently detailed captions. Sometimes I can recognize the background. A croissant at my home, or in a hotel.

Self-captioning Photos
If I have a set of photos of a particular destination, or a day's outing, I try to take a photo of a signpost to reind myself, and put on my blog or in a magzine article or book. That way the reader can instantly see the destination being described.

Please share with friends and colleagues links to your favourite posts. 
I try to take self-captioning photos.

The origins of honey pots in shops, supermarkets, hotels overseas, online

 Helios is the Greek sun god.

I found Helios, a brand of honey from Mexico.

Lid of small Helios brand honey pot. Photo by Angela Lansbury.

Helios pots in my collection also include one whose lid declares Naranja Amarga
Bitter Orange

Lid of Naranja Amarga, bitter orange. Photo by Angela Lansbury.


Lid of Wilkin & Sons Ltd, Tiptree. Photo by Angela Lansbury.


Small empty jar from finished honey, showing label of Tiptree, Essex, England.
Photo by Angela Lansbury.
Miel de melada  is honey from honeydew. Cantabria is in Spain.

UK

British brands of honey include:


With the aid of a small magnifying glass, I read, produced on the Tiptree fruit farms since 1885.

The front label says, a blend of non EU honey.



Wilkin & Sons Ltd

Tiptree

Essex



Useful Websites

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helios


King Charles spoke in Italian to the Italians - you can too!

King Charles III on a British ten pound note.

The Italian name equivalent to Charles is Carlo.

 King Charles spoke in Italian to the Italians in Rome, the eternal city, in April 2025. I am learning Italian on Duolingo and you can, too. 

Here are some of the phrases I have learned

Italian - English

aspetto che - I am waiting for

bello essere qui - good to be here

mio marito - my husband (the one I am married to)

e importante - it is important (you need to put the accent on the solo e to change the letter e from 'and' to 'is')

causa - because (the second half of the English word is almost the same, cause)

tutto sara facile - everything will be easy

vero - true (agreeing with somebody) Nod and you have 'that's true', raise your eyebrows and you have, 'really!' or ironically,'NO! You don't say!'

At breakfast, the word for honey is mela

Ho bisogno de - I want/ I have need of

voglio - I want

non voglio - I do not want (v and w are pairs, twins, but you need to tell them apart. v and w are interchangeable in some languages, for example, in German the word wilkommen is pronounced vilkommen)

voglio che - I want that (eg I would like something to happen)

mela - honey

imparare - to learn


To learn Italian you can use Duolingo. 

To find handy phrases and sentences for travelling, you can use Wikivoyage Phsebook Italian.

To translate words you can use Translate Google.

To translate an entire speech you can save sections in Translate Google.

To practise speaking, you can attend an Italian speaking club of Toastmasters International. There is an online club in Rome. I prepared a message for them.

I am learning Italian on Duolingo.

Sto imparando l'italiano su Duolingo.

I would like to attend an online meeting.

Vorrei partecipare a una riunione online.

Useful Websites

duolingo.com

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The Museum of Honey and Trying Honey & Jam Pots in Hotels, not just Marks, Helios, Bon Maman but many more to try

 At breakfast in hotels you often have the opportunity to try out new brands of honey and jam and marmalade.

Some people immediately discover their old or new favourite brand. I often find that if I go to two or three hotels on a tour, by hotel three I have forgotten the name of the brand from day one. All I can remember is that the last one was better, or this one is better.

Now I have started a new system. I photograph the small pot. Then I Whatsapp it to myself with my description of the good or bad features. I give it marks out of ten. 5 is good enough. 6, ok buy if no alternative. 7 Yes, buy some if you see it. 8 is go and hunt for some. 9 and 10 I stock up, buy in bulk, hunt for it to eat regularly at home.

Bonne Maman

Great blackcurrant jam.


In addition to the lovely jam, the jars have a ten sides shape at the lower half, and a tartan lid.


Notice the picture of cassis, French for blackcurrant.

Now, my honey, let's move on to honey. (Americans say honey to people, the Brits say, sweetie, sweetheart, darling, love, dear.)

Honey

I like solid honey. My husband likes runny honey. My preferred honey is more expensive.

Helios



Helios mniature honey pot lid. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.

Notice the little honey bee on the label.

I recently tried Helios runny honey. I found it a bit gluey. Good enough. But even better was the next one.

Colmenar De Las Donas

I loved colmenar de las Donas.I had a lovely flavour. Not over sweet, 

I tried it on brown seed bread which was a waste as you could not taste it of suck it and get the taste and that sugar strike at the bck of your throat.


Here is a list of where to see bees by country.

SPAIN

Colmenar in Andalucia, near Malaga in Spain, has a museum of honey. 

UK

You can also see live bees behind glass in several museums in the UK. For example, 

The Horniman museum in south London, 

The Oxford University Museum of Natural History, 

LITHUANIA

The Ancient Beekeeping Museum of Lithuania.

Useful Websites

https://en.andalucia.org/listing/museo-de-la-miel/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helios

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Wednesday, April 9, 2025

Collecting & Displaying Souvenirs Such as cards, coins, spoons & Recording Travel Memories

 You can collect a paper or card memento of every stop on your trip for a scrapbook or to illustrate a diary.

If you buy souvenirs, or collect a type of item from every city or country, you can buy display cases. 



Postage Stamps

When I was a child I collected postage stamps. I bought stamp albums. 

Postcards

As a teenager I collected postcards. I bought albums for postcards. 

Coins

I saved coins from trips. I bought an album for my coins. 

Wartime Memories

In WW2 medals were given for participating in certain battles. Years later, it became possible to make a 33d frame of medals for one's own satisfaction, or for descendants to create as a memorial to their ancestors.

Scrapbooks & Diaries

You can buy travel diaries and scrapbooks . Paste in tickets, postcards, and other reminders of places you visited. 

I am a collector, a hoarder, and keep shoe boxes and box files for each country. You can also cover a notebook or shoebox or magazine box or old suitcase with brochures showing the country names and landmarks of places described in your diaries.

Thimbles

I used to collect thimbles. They were small enough to go in my handbag, and did not take up lots of room in a suitcase. 

You can buy display cases for thimbles.



Display cases which are open are more likely to collect dust. But provide easy access if you want to take items out and read the detailed wording.


If you are travelling on budget airlines such as RyanAir, you need to buy small souvenirs, or look for a company which will ship to your home country.

Spoons

Some people collect decorative spoons.  You can buy wooden display cases for spoons to hang on the wall. 



Rugs

I met a pilot's wife who bought rugs and small carpets from every oriental country she visited. She had piles of them under beds in the spare room. The thin and elborate silk ones were hung on the wall. Others were scattered on the corridors and room floors throughout her apartment.

After you have collected a few you may wish to put them in order. Display them. 

Pens

A friend in Singapore collects pens. He visits a pen shop at every destination.

Books & DIcitonaries

When I went to countries in Europe I bought a dictionary and a phrasebook in each country. When I wnt to live in the USA, I bought a dictionary, which was an American Webster's dictionary. 

Maps

We bought maps for driving holidays. Eventually we had a collection of maps.

Wine Bottles & Labels

My husband is now a wine educator and wine writer and he visits vineyards and cellar doors. He buys wines from the regions which he visits, on a theme. 

Some kitchens have a horizontal wine rack, which stops corks drying out. Some bridges have bottle racks or sections. When you have a large number of bottles. and keep them from year to year, or save them for anniversaries, you might want to invest in a wine fridge which keeps wines at a low temperature. If you are in the tropics as an expat, you might need a wie friedge to keep wines out of the heat. 

I visited a relative who kept empty wine bottles on top of her kitchen and living room cabinets. I thought that was a good idea and started to do the same. 

Your policy could be to allocate some of your holiday spending money to collecting certain products on a theme, rather than bying souvenirs at random. 

Postcards

Or you might decide to collect free or inexpensive items, such as free advertising postcards.

Playing Cards

I used to collect playing cards from every destination. 

Puppets

Supermarkets had the cheapest puppets. I bought bathtime gloves which have finger puppet ends to the fingers. The styles change every season, so in the course of two years I had three or four different hand gloves.

 They are light to carry, for entertaining children at restaurants, and on long journeys on transport.

 I later found pupets at museums, often only one puppet of a local character. Puppets tend to appear at Christmas, on racks near the cashier counters.

Useful Websites

I also bought puppets.

 

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Italian gave us these English words but note the intonation

My previous posts have looked at the Italian words which are easy to recogize from the similar words in English.  If you like music you know or can easily see that we get the English words diva and maestro, piano and solo and sonata and soprano from Italian.

But you can also look at English words to find the Italian. If you want words in everyday language there are plenty more. I looked down the list in Wikipedia to select my favourites.


 Union Jack English flags in the UK. The English word coffee and the Italian word Gelato. 

English - Italian

balcony - il balcone

graffiti - writing - plural

Italian sounds smoothe and sonorous, a pleasing sound, even to speakers of Spanish, a language which is very similar. Italian, like Japanese, ends words with a vowel. The Japanese turn hotel into hoteru. The Italian for hotel is albergo. To remember the Italian I think of a lodging for the a followed by the l. But if you go to an Italian ski resort you just walk around and see the word Albergo everywhere on big buildings with balconies, so you quickly learn it.

The word graffiti is a reminder that the letter i is used to show the masculine plural. The names Maria and Mario are the singular masuline and singular plural.

I now have two common words acting as reminder for the masculine plural, spaghetti, and graffiti. 

English Intonation

English has German intonation, stamping loudly on the first syllable. Think of the word kindergarten, from kinder, child, and garten, garden. That is also a reminder of how the letters t and d occur in almost the same word in different languages. 

The English name Victoria sounds like VicTORia.

But Italian sounds the last vowel or the penultimate (last but one). We recognise this when we say Maria as MarIa. So the word Trattoria does not sound like Victoria but like Maria. 

Monday, April 7, 2025

Italian Words which are almost the same as English

I am 'ploughing ahead - There's an English idiom - with learning Italian on Duolingo. Many Italian words end in o, for the masculine,  for feminine, or e. Plurals may end in i.

I also looked at a bilingual brochure from Commune di Cannara. It is pretty obvious - another English idiom - that via is way or road, ponte is bridge


Flag of Italy. 

Italian - English

aeroplano - aeroplane

causa - cause

Centro - centre

Fertili - fertile

dignita - dignity

importante - important

Lago - lake

minuti - minutes (i is plural, like spaghetti)

passageri - passengers

poverta - poverty

recente - recent

ricchezza - wealth - a richness of letters c and z

successo - success

timore - fear - like timit

viso - face - like visor


Useful Websites

Learn Italian for free online

duolingo.com

Italian words you already know

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_words_of_Italian_origin

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Activity Breaks Abroad For Anniverseries, Birthdays, Celebrations & Hen and Stag events, Kids

I looked at an old brochure about children's activities at London's Cartoon Museum. I started thinking about ideas for weekend breaks, before and after conferences, weddings, weekends away:

Build a Bear 

classes for kids and expectant parents.

Bus Tours

Open Top Bus tours of the city. 

Card Games

Backgammon, Bridge, chess, draughts, monopoly, scrabble, snap, whist.

Ideal for the elderly, immobile, uncertain weather, winter.

Cartoons for kids. 

Cartoons for adults

Hire a cartoonist to draw all the guests - and put the pictures on the wall.

Hire a cartoonist to teach everybody to do cartoon portraits or themselves and each other.

Cookery Classes

Cultural/Heritage/National Trust Tour

Food & Drink

Breweries tours. For example, Guinness.

Chocolate exhibitions.

Chocolate Museums

Chocolate shops often run tasting or making events. 

Whisky Distilleries

Riedel Glass Demo



Reidel glasses are shaped to enhance the flavours of different kinds of drink.  The glasses are expensive and have the company name on the base of each glass. They also make elegant decanters.






Gold panning

Jewelery Making

Origami

Laughter

Laughter classes. 

Music

Jazz. Karaoke. Opera. Rock. Fancy dress Fifties Sixties, Seventies, Eighties, Nineties. 

Pottery Classes.

Pottery museums or seconds shops.

Religious / Multi-Faith Tour

Outlet Malls

Swimming and Diving Lessons

Aerobics in the water

Swimming

Diving

Check local hotels, swimming pools and country clubs.

Walking Tours of the City

Wine tours


Useful Websites

Build A Bear

https://www.buildabear.co.uk/brand-about-press.html

Create Cartoons

https://www.cartoonmuseum.org/free-resources

Pottery

https://pottery-london.co.uk/birthday-party-in-london

Reidel Glass Events

https://www.riedel.com/en-gb/events

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Saturday, April 5, 2025

Summer Sun Delights comical poem by Angela Lasnbury


 In summer sun time, each British girl knows

In this brief time, pale people take off clothes

Build sand castles, like kids, slide down sand dunes

Sink into soft sand, play happy, loud tunes


If blue sea, white waves, wide sky, catch your eye

Buy tickets, then bouncing boats collect you

Ride with picnics, sunscreen, brimmed hats by you

Ouch - sunburn! Let brollies' shade protect you

In Singapore we could swim in the pool

In humid weather, it's good to feel cool

In tropical sun, ten minutes is enough

Clinic photos warned cancer, looked rough


Yet, we're all hoping for much warmer days

We envy friends who are flying away

'til we hear tales of sickness, luggage loss,

Glad to get home at the end of their stay


I won't sleep on sand, nor live in a cave

I'm neither so desperate, nor brave

Rescue me from remote beaches alone

I'm happy to sit at my desk here at home.


Palm trees looks romantic, and starry nights

Seafront promenades, coloured, twinkling lights

Until you wake up with mosquito bites!

On balance, I prefer here, I'll all right.

-end-

Brolly is British English, short for umbrella.

Photo

Angela Lansbury by the swimming pool at Cashew Heights, Singapore. 

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Cute crochet animals - on pillarboxes and your desk, to copy

Rabbits in yarn on a post box in London, England. Photo by Angela Lansbury. 

Yarn Bombing On Mail Boxes

You may have noticed the cute crochet animals on the red pillar boxes in England - or on my previous posts. Now I have seen for several weeks, rabbits on top of a post box, called a pillar box because of its shape, in London.

Where To Buy Wool

You can buy wool and craft supplies in many depatment stores. In London we have Hobbycraft in Watford and other locations. In Singapore, New Zealand and Australia you have Spotlight.

I often see balls of wool, buttons, zips, and empty picture frames in charity shops such as St Luke's in London. The same goes for the op shops I saw in New Zealand. 

Bargain Hunting

I went into St Luke's shop in Hatch End which raises money for local hospices, care homes bringing rest, and happiness to the terminally ill. The public are generous in donating unwanted household clutter. 

Whilst I am in the shop for fifteen minutes three people come in with bags of goods to donate, and two more customers arrive. So while one member of staff is at the till serving you, another is in the back room sorting goods and labelling them with prices. A third is putting new stuff on shelves, and moving items which have not sold into the bargain bins - wire baskets. 

As I am a regular buyer, to keep within my budget, I look first at the children's toys in the window for my grand-daughter. I wash all plastic building blocks, and the shiny pages of washable plasticky baby books.

Next I look in the bargain bins to keep within my budget.

I used to look at the crochet designs on post boxes and wonder, how did they do that? How did they get the idea? How did they design a rabbit. How do you do crochet?

On one of my successful days, I see a crochet for kids box in the window of St Luke's shop.

My crochet kit box, left,  the book, hook and contents on the right. Photo by Angela Lansbury.  Copyright. 

 For the past decade, I have regretted not learning to crochet from my late mother-in-law who used to crochet and made me a bikini in white crochet.

Kit Contents

I bought the crochet set in St Luke's. The lid of the box showed four simple animals, a bee, and owl, a snail and a rabbit.  I checked the box was complete. It contained a crochet hook, just the one, some coloured balls of wool, white filling, like soft cotton wool. Enough for one animal in a plain colour, or a pair in different colours, or the bee in black and yellow stripes, with black to embroider U shape shut eyes, or filled circles for open eyes, and tie a pink bow of plaited wool on the neck of one rabbit and the ear of another. 

How to do it? A thin book inside called Too Cute Crochet gave instructions. The only thing missing was, how long would it take!

Time Taken To Crochet

I googled that for the answer. An experienced crochet worker could make the smalled animal in an hour. But a beginner, like me, might take three to five hours! That sounded more realistic.

At ten minutes a day, five hours, maximum about three weeks, if I kept at it, first thing each morning, or lunch time, or a minute here and there as an escapist activity instead of reading the news, during the day. Or an afternoon or all day at the weekend. When going out, waiting for trains, so long as I had somebody else watching for the train and sign board so I did not miss my train. Or when babysitting a child who fell asleep.

Group Crochet Activity

Now I realise that making a pillar box topping is easier than one might think. Most books and magazines on crochet will have a design for a simple animal, probably including a rabbit. One person can knit or crochet a rabbit in the smallest size. Another person, or you, in a week or two, can knit a second rabbit. Week three a third. One person crochets the flat circle like a large plate on which to sew the three rabbits. That's why the pillar box is empty for two or three weeks while the knitters are busy making it, or away at work or on holiday. Suddenly, after a gap in time, the seasonal spring rabbits appear. 

Planning A Project

Experienced knitters and crochet experts will be looking for patterns for other houses, animals, photos to copy, with figures such as footballers and footballs, or the royal family, ever popular subjects, apearing seasonally. Very impressive. But once you are in the know, buying sets of crocet hooks in different sizes, a book of patterns, finally learning how to invent your own by changing to season or co-ordinating colours, team colours, simply a matter of donating the wool and the time.

From Amateur to Expert

Plus, of course, doing it for a year or more until you become an expert. I might make one small rabbit. I might at least crochet the first row. I might at least glance through the book. At least, even if I don't do it, now I know how it is done. 

So do you. 

Call To Action - Solo Crochet

You can initiate a project elsewhere in England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, or anyhere in the world. Now try making a crochet toy, or covering a square or round box on your own. To fill time. Or learn a new skill.

Call To Action - Group Crochet Or Crafts

Or join a group. You might find a crafts or knitting or crochet group attached to a club, an expats club, or on Eventbrite, or Meetup or in your local newspaper, or a attached to a religious group such as a church, mosque, synagogue, temple. Or a charity group fund-raising could charge for classes or meetings. Or run the groups for free, and sell the crochet toys and craftwork made, or auction the pillar box toppings.

If there's none, you could encourage a bored friend to do it alone or link with you in person or on Zoom chat. 

Joining a Group

Or starting a crochet, crafts and decorating group for bonding bored expats. In Singapore I joined a craft group attached to the Australian women's association, also at the American Club's women's association, I met some Japanese ladies, who has South African and American friends, and a group of five of us formed a craft group meeting monthly, then weekly, for tea at a different person's house where the host lady chose the craft and either bought kits for which she was reimbursed, or she provided the kits or shared resources such as paper for origami and making cards and envelopes, paper and painted or blank postcards for painting, or yarn and knitting needes and crochet hooks, and all the guests brought the cakes and herbal teas.

Useful Websites

Australian book publisher, kids' kits, and products, including chocolate eggs filled with confectionary

www.hinkler.com.au

www.curiousuniverse.co.uk

Glossary - For Teens and Those Speaking English As A Second Language

decade - ten years

glossary - short dictonary at the end of an article

-ends-

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Friday, April 4, 2025

Favourite Food and Drink I've learned about in my travels

 A facebook friend asked, tell us where you live by naming a food. I thought of all sorts of foods I had learned from living in the USA, Spain, and Singapore, and visiting other countries. Here's my list of favourite food and drink.

Canada 

1 Maple syrup (on waffles at breakfast time in Canada). Now, in the uk

 Now 


France

brie

Camembert cheese

crepes (Mont St Michel speciality, served from restaurants and kiosks hot with Grand Marnier)

Marron glace (sweet chestnut paste) in tins (which I first discoverd in the British Channel islands which are near France)

Indonesia 

1 Beef rendang (coconut and spices).

Malaysia 

1 Turkey ham. (Muslims don't eat pork.)

Netherlands (especially Holland)

Edam cheese.

Gouda cheese.

Singapore -

1 Chicken rice. (In England we would have chicken with chips.) 

2 Mango (with) sticky rice.

3 Durian ice cream.

Spain

Turron (confectionary -a kind of nougat which I found chocolate covered). 

UK - 

Scotland 

Smoked salmon

(what I missed and am pleased to come back to) tea time 

England

 Roast beef and Yorkshire pudding.

Bread and butter pudding.

Summer pudding.

Scones with clotted (double thick) cream and strawberry jam, 

Crumpets (warmed so the holes absorb melting butter and jam. 

Frank Coopers Original Oxford Coarse Cut Marmalade. On Amazon I was shocked to see it was ten pounds then realised it was a pack of two jars meaning about five pounds each jar.

Mateus rose sweet blush wine from Portugal in UK supermarkets. Black tower , rieslings and gewurtraminer German and Alsace (French) sweet white wines. 

Cadbury's fruit and nut chocolate. 

Cream filled easter egg eggs. 

Wales

Welsh cakes (finger height, half way between a flat pancake and a high scone, eaten hot with melting butter) 

USA

T bone steaks. 

Buffalo wings (checken wings.)

Bagels (Donut shaped brad with a hole in the middle and crisp outside) and lox (smoked salmon).

Potatoes in their jackets. 

 Ice wine. Zinfandel (which is a grape) blush wine in Paul Masson carafes.

Oreos.

You might like to make your own list. You can send it to me here in the comments, or find me on Facebook.

Thursday, April 3, 2025

Fun Translating Italian Songs & Names


Verdi statue, Bussolo. Wikipedia.




 I thought I'd try a game to help learning Italian.

1 Translate some Italian song and opera names

2 Find some place names

3 Translate some family names


Songs and Operas

Operas

1 Opera 

La Bella Dormente Nel Bosco  The Sleeping Beauty In The Woods.

Il Medico E La Morte - The Doctor And Death (actually a jolly fantasy about a cobbler and a fairy)

 


La fiamma - the flame

A basso porto - at the lower harbour


2 Place Names

 Ponte vecchio in Florence means old bridge. The adjective comes second in Italian after the noun.


3 Family Names

 Giuseppe Verdi Verdi is green.


Italian - English

a - at

bella - beauty

bosco - woods

dormente - sleeping

e - and

fiamma - flame

il - the (masculine)

la - the (feminine)

medico - doctor

morte - death

nel - in the

ponte - bridge

porto - port/harbour

vecchio - old

verdi - green


English - Italian

a - a

and - e

beauty - bella

bridge - ponte

death - morte

doctor - medico

fame - fiamma

green - verdi

in the - nel

old - vecchio

port - porto

sleeping - dormente

the - la (feminine) il (masculine)

 woods - bosco

You can visit the house where Verdi lived.

Useful Websites

duolingo.com

wiki operas

Verdi museum

https://www.villaverdi.org/

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