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Shakesthegrounds Rumblings

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Shakesthecoffecan:
In 1998 my entire extended family took a trip to Florida to see the Space Shuttle lift off. My sister had the tix and she was in a motel in Orlando and we were in CoCo Beach. Miles and miles apart. We agreed to meet outside the Astronaut Hall of Fame on the way to the gathering point to catch the bus the rest of the way. Never mind there would be a hundred million people passing by, 80% from Ohio, and I had to wait out there 45 minutes before they came rolling up with the tix.

That is how I take the small town with me.

opinionista:

--- Quote from: shakestheground on January 23, 2007, 10:51:40 pm ---that tiny piece of Spain that is totally inside France I cannot think of the name of.

--- End quote ---

Baja Cerdaña? Lower Cerdanya in English, I guess. (Not to be confused with the italian island of Cerdeña). I was there a few years ago, in the town of Puigcerdá (pronounced something like: pooj-sir-dah). It's a ski village with breathtaking views. We only stayed for one day. Little Spanish or French is spoken there.  Locals speak mostly in catalan.

Shakesthecoffecan:
Is that the same as Llivia?

Your post raises another question I have yet to find and answer for: how do you make an "enyay" the "n" with the "tilda" over top of it? Is there a comand that does this or do you have a different key board?

opinionista:

--- Quote from: shakestheground on February 01, 2007, 12:16:13 pm ---Is that the same as Llivia?

Your post raises another question I have yet to find and answer for: how do you make an "enyay" the "n" with the "tilda" over top of it? Is there a comand that does this or do you have a different key board?

--- End quote ---

I have a keyboard in Spanish, which includes the letter ñ and the tilde. I don't know if there's a command to it in other keyboards.

As for Llivia, yes it is the town you were talking about. It belongs to Cerdaña, but it's separated by a piece of land that belongs to France. I've never been there, though. Here's a map. But Puigcerdá is practically France. There's very little resemblance to Spain, except in the food.



Wayne:

--- Quote from: shakestheground on February 01, 2007, 12:16:13 pm ---Your post raises another question I have yet to find and answer for: how do you make an "enyay" the "n" with the "tilda" over top of it? Is there a comand that does this or do you have a different key board?
--- End quote ---
;D   One way you can do it, if there happens to be one on the screen already, is just to block and copy it   ... ñ   <- I took this one from opiñonista's post    ;D   (you know you can just highlight it, then Ctrl-C, then move cursor where you want it, then Ctrl-V)

Course that only works if there happens to be one on your screen at the time.

There is also a combination of ALT plus some 3-digit numeric code that will often but not always work.  e.g., it's not working on my keyboard right now ...     ::)   I think it only works with a number pad? The codes for the usual Euroextra letters are in the range of about 130 to 160.  Alt-130 is "e" with an acute (bottom left to top right) accent.

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