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Who's heard Little Richard sing "Shake a Hand"?

Discussion in 'Random Nonsense' started by Daniel~, Mar 30, 2018.

  1. Daniel~

    Daniel~ Chief BBS Administrator Staff Member

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    circa 1965

  2. ThunderRd

    ThunderRd Irreverent Query Chairman Staff Member

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    I was too lazy to do the homework, but after seeing my guess confirmed I ran to Wiki and found this:
    I should have just looked there to begin with, lolz, I was even lucky to have spelled it right in Thai [my spelling usually sucks]
  3. cloasters

    cloasters Moderator

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    Me like it a lot too. Thanks for the post!
  4. cloasters

    cloasters Moderator

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    What a great musician, thanks for finding this, it's one of my faves too!
  5. cloasters

    cloasters Moderator

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    This one sure told it like it was. And we listened and learned from it. The powers and principalities never learn anything, as long as the little people allow them to kick us around.
  6. Daniel~

    Daniel~ Chief BBS Administrator Staff Member

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  7. Daniel~

    Daniel~ Chief BBS Administrator Staff Member

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    As Tr has proven himself an astute namer of horses a special treat

    Some horsey porn!

    Last edited: Jul 14, 2020
  8. Daniel~

    Daniel~ Chief BBS Administrator Staff Member

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    We have so much in common! To the best of my ignorance
    I have never misspelled a Thai word! Yet my spelling in English
    is a crime against Linguistics. Go figure! LOL
  9. Daniel~

    Daniel~ Chief BBS Administrator Staff Member

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    you want women!? We got em!!

  10. cloasters

    cloasters Moderator

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    Horsey porn? Certainly not on our board!
  11. ThunderRd

    ThunderRd Irreverent Query Chairman Staff Member

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    Lolz, right :)

    Thai is what is known as a 'tonal' language, so many words in Thai sound the same to foreign listeners, but are actually different words because the 'tone' is different: high tone, falling tone, mid-tone, low tone, rising tone are some of them.

    The best example of this is ไม้ใหม่ไม่ไหม้ไม่, which when separated into words looks like this [in the Thai language there is no space between words, believe it or not]:
    ไม้ ใหม่ ไม่ ไหม้ ไม่ ? [the question mark is mine, there aren't any in Thai]
    to the untrained ear this sounds like 'my my my my my', but actually is 5 different words that mean:

    'New wood doesn't burn, does it?'

    Each of those words has a 'tone marker' that helps the reader to pronounce the word. If you memorize the letters and what the markers look like than you can read Thai, because every letter in the language has only ONE sound all of the time. There aren't any letters that have varying sounds like 'c' or 'g' in English do, and that is why we have so many sounds in English with only 26 characters. There are over 60 in Thai. The good news is, each letter always sounds the same, so it's pretty easy to read [as languages go.]

    In the above example, the first word has a high tone, the second is low, the third is falling, the fourth is long falling, and the last is rising. This is where I always screw the pooch in spelling, and I get the tone markers wrong, so I end up spelling something entirely different. My speaking is far, far better :)

    Pretty confusing, huh? Seeing as most people think it's an obscure language [depending on how you look at it: it's spoken in only one country, but it is the 20th biggest country in the world by population with about 65 million people] so it is a fairly useless language anywhere but in Thailand.
  12. Daniel~

    Daniel~ Chief BBS Administrator Staff Member

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    As I read, I wondered...

    With so much depending upon ones tone , does the Thai language lend it self more readily to emotional expression?

    Or, put another way, do things change when a speaker is angry or happy?
  13. Daniel~

    Daniel~ Chief BBS Administrator Staff Member

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    Just cover your eyes and peek though your fingers! "
    :O}

    I keep watching that last race. I sense that God was in there somewhere I just can't seem to see his hand
  14. Daniel~

    Daniel~ Chief BBS Administrator Staff Member

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  15. ThunderRd

    ThunderRd Irreverent Query Chairman Staff Member

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    Generally, they are a very animated, emotional, and demonstrative bunch, especially when in groups. I might say even boisterous. I find it difficult to emulate them when talking in groups, because I am not naturally loud/animated, but I have gotten used to their way over the years. My kids have taken after me and are on the reserved side as well, but many of their friends drive me crazy :)

    There is an interesting book, 'Heart Talk', written by a guy called Christopher G. Moore, a well-known novelist who has been an expat for many years in Thailand. He describes how the word 'jai' [ ใจ ] is one of the central words around which the Thai language is focused, using adjectives connecting to it to describe a rainbow of feelings. Sometimes, though, it isn't easy to interpret them if you're not Thai.

    Here is an example:
    เย็นใจ (yen jai). เย็น (yen) = cold, while ใจ (jai) = heart.

    Most western people would jump to the conclusion that a cold heart is a negative and a hot heart is sort of sensual or sexy. Wrong. In Thailand, a hot heart is a negative and a cold heart is a positive. A person who is impatient or pushy is:

    ใจร้อน (jai rhon) = hot heart. Go figure.

    By the way, he's written a couple of dozen novels with plots centered in Thailand. If you ever see one, check it out, they are good reads.
    https://www.christophergmoore.com/
  16. cloasters

    cloasters Moderator

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    Speaking of Asian languages I'm near certain that English sounds more strange to Cantonese and Mandarin speakers than their languages sound to us. Because English has no tones built in to it and we change our tone all the time, depending on emotion.

    It's easy to know when a Mandarin speaker is angry, the tones don't change but volume level is higher--and they simply sound angry. You can't miss it. Sorry, no help on Thai.
  17. cloasters

    cloasters Moderator

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    It IS one sweet tune.
  18. cloasters

    cloasters Moderator

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    Great song!
  19. ThunderRd

    ThunderRd Irreverent Query Chairman Staff Member

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    I thought since we're talking about Thai stuff, I'd post a Thai song. These two guys are Thailand's biggest pop star EVER, and probably their biggest bona fide rock star in a collaboration.

    The guy in the black suit is named Thongchai McIntyre, stage name 'Bird' [grandfather Scottish] and the guy in the white T-shirt with the guitar is called Seksan Sukpimai [stage name Sek Loso].

    Sek actually spent many years in England and Germany hobnobbing with rock's elite; his band played Glastonbury a couple of times, and he's known as a bit of a bad boy [sex, drugs and r'n'r]. He has also appeared at New York City's Lincoln Center [if you don't already know, it's the home of the NY Philharmonic, Metropolitan Opera, and the NYC Ballet.]

    Both of these guys are seriously talented, especially Bird, who is an accomplished actor/singer/dancer/producer.

    See what you think. Sek is the songwriter:

  20. Daniel~

    Daniel~ Chief BBS Administrator Staff Member

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    I spoke with Bill and Ted and we all agree you are a most excellent source on many topics.

    Please accept this as a commemoration of your many good deeds!

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