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In the introduction to the Penguin edition of the play, Williams directs the reader to use the Anglicized pronunciation "Cá-mino Réal." The title suggests some sort of road, but the setting is a dead-end place, a Spanish-speaking town surrounded by desert with only sporadic transportation to the outside world.
The synopsis of this pilot parallels the episode "Beaches".[4]Note: This pilot features prototypes of the main characters, sometimes with significantly different designs, including Dora (green-eyes, not with brown eyes), Boots (different appearance and not wearing boots), Benny (a brown bull, not blue, called "Benito"), Tico (a blue Skunk with orange hair, not a purple squirrel with pink hair ...
The story behind the town’s name is that in the mid-18th century, a local Ojibwe man married a white, Spanish-speaking woman and they taught their children to speak Spanish. When French explorers came to the area and heard the locals speaking Spanish, they remarked, "espagnole" (the French word for "Spanish").
Avilés: la villa del adelantado (The Town of the Adelantado) [3] Barakaldo: la localidad fabril ("Factory Town") Barcelona: la ciudad condal (The City of Counts) Bilbao: el bocho (The Hole) Cádiz: la tacita de plata (The Little Silver Cup) La Coruña: el balcón del Atlántico (The Balcony over the Atlantic), la ciudad de cristal (Crystal City)
Pencils are commonly used at polling stations instead of pens. This is because ink might run on to different sections of the ballot and obscure the voter’s choice. The Facts.
Whatever the beginnings were, the tradition has caught on like wildfire in Spain. Supermarket chains such as Mercadona and Super Sol advertise and sell "uvas de la suerte" across Spain.
A disgruntled student used a pencil to stab his teacher at a Florida middle school, then smacked her in the head with a backpack as she called for help, according to the Collier County Sheriff’s ...
This article contains tables of U.S. cities and metropolitan areas with information about the population aged 5 and over that speaks Spanish at home. The tables do not reflect the total number or percentage of people who know Spanish.