¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!
G. M.
(29 Oct 2024 07:18 UTC)
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Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!
kaladorn@xxxxxx
(29 Oct 2024 08:02 UTC)
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Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!
Jeff Zeitlin
(29 Oct 2024 14:03 UTC)
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Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!
Timothy Collinson
(06 Nov 2024 20:58 UTC)
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Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!
kaladorn@xxxxxx
(06 Nov 2024 23:40 UTC)
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Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!
Timothy Collinson
(27 Nov 2024 07:07 UTC)
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Wafer TL (was Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!) Alex Goodwin (27 Nov 2024 11:12 UTC)
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Re: Wafer TL (was Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!)
Timothy Collinson
(27 Nov 2024 13:46 UTC)
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Re: Wafer TL (was Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!)
kaladorn@xxxxxx
(05 Dec 2024 02:46 UTC)
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Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!
kaladorn@xxxxxx
(05 Dec 2024 02:33 UTC)
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Re: [TML] ¡Vuelo Raso Nº9!
Timothy Collinson
(05 Dec 2024 06:27 UTC)
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> Though for English speakers, Spanish is often regarded as the easiest > language to pick up. Having had a serious go at German which I > thought hard till I tackled Czech, and having dabbled in Mandarin, I > would concur. > > But I can't help feeling that I had I focused on just one language I > might be fluent by now instead of having chunks of a dozen or so. > (And 'thank you' in many more.) > > On the upside, it's really handy on International Fayre days at Uni > welcoming students from all over the world. My colleagues report > watching me on such occasions and the surprise (and delight > apparently) that some show in meeting someone that can say a few words > from home. However badly. > > But I still dream of just being able to switch from one language to > another in some James Bondian fashion as though I were a native > speaker in whatever was required. What TL are brain wafers again? > > tc > > ----- > Collision, According to T5(.10, at least), wafers are TTL13, so you might have a bit to wait. Above and beyond the OTL/TTL thing. Alex --