Me divierte en Españoland

Voy a hablar sobre Españoland.  I am in Españoland.  Where’s that, you might ask?  It’s an imaginary place where people speak a peculiar variant of Spanish known as Españolandes.  It’s a dialect spoken by a couple hundred people who happen to be in Españoland at any given time.  Españolandores use just six tenses (present indicative, present progressive, future, perfect past, imperfect past, and subjunctive).  They also have a functional vocabulary of about 1,000 words.  They never use the familiar (tú) or plural (vosotros) forms, and they avoid any obvious English cognates like "software" and "desafortunadamente" (unfortunately).  They always start conversations with "Voy a (put verb here)," which means "I’m going to (put verb here) and you better listen to my flawless Españolandes."  And inevitably they always end conversations with "En pocas palabras, eso es todos."  Roughly translated, this means, "I’m finished, now go do something else."  Españolandores are quite competent when it comes to discussing nuclear disarmament, the ancient Roman concept of death, and the affect of methamphetamines on rural Bolivians, but they sometimes have difficulties buying goods in markets, ordering food in restaurants, or asking directions.  It makes for lively conversations of numerous topics of dubious relevance.  Those who care to speak on common Españoland topics typically speak English too well to put up with broken Españolandes, and those who speak Españolandes cannot communicate with those who need to speak Españolandes because they don’t have enough vocabulary and don’t know the appropriate verb tenses.
 
Life in Españoland is improving.  I’m starting to plough through some of the rigidities of the language.  I’m learning to give the teacher what they want to hear.  The end is near.  I have about three weeks before my Spanish test.  Simply put, I’ve given up learning Spanish for the next month and am focusing on learning what I need to pass the final exam.  I don’t want to do that.  I’d rather learn Spanish than Españolandes, but I don’t have much choice.  I learn by osmosis, meaning that I prefer to absorb as much as I can fix my mistakes as I go along.  I rather make a mistake ordering food in a restaurant and using a seventh (gasp!) verb tense incorrectly than stay silent because I don’t have the vocabulary needed to order food and can express my wishes because I didn’t learn that tense.  Once I leave Españoland in June, I’ll go back to learning Spanish.  En pocas palabras, eso es todos.

Who says Paraguay is a small country?

Dear Reader, I’m not sure why my blog titles lately have been exclamatory or rhetorical–I must be asking a lot of questions.  Actually, I’ve had a habit lately of finding instant answers to questions that pop into my head.  For example, today I wondered what the suffix "-stan" means.  I don’t mean the name "Stan," ala the dude featured in the tragic Eminem song.  I mean the suffix attached to scores of countries and provinces ranging from Pakistan to Kurdistan.  I went online tonight and found out that "-stan" is an old Persian root referring to "the place where one stays."  Interestingly, modern Persia is named Iran, not Iranstan or Irstan or Perstan.  How many "stans" can you name?  How about Tajikistan, or Kyrgyzstan?  Or Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan (of Borat fame), Hindustan, Kurdistan, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Baluchistan, Dagestan, or Waziristan?  Yes, those are real places.  Can you find all of them on a map?  If you know a "-stan" I missed, please feel free to post a comment.  It would be fun to be feature the ultimate collection of "-stans" from around the world.
 
I digress.  Yes, the Internet is a wonderful information resource, but it doesn’t have the answer to everything.  Today I found a map in a musty book on Paraguay (what else?) that depicts what I’ve heard time and again–that Paraguay is about the size of California.  The book has a map showing Paraguay superimposed over California.  Sure enough, it is about 1/8th smaller than California by land mass.  Paraguay, with a population of about 5.7 million, has a far smaller population than California, but it is by no means small.  It just seems small because it is wedged between Brazil and Argentina, two countries that are far larger in both size and population.  Some call Paraguay a "buffer" state between those rival nations.  Perhaps.  Imagine if Texas were still independent (Texas was an independent nation during 1836-1845, a fact Texans will proudly tell you).  If it were, Texas would surely be a buffer state between the United States of America and the United States of Mexico (some would argue that it in fact a buffer state).  Calling Texas a buffer state though would diminish its stature as an large country.  The same goes for Paraguay.
 
I posted the map of Paraguay superimposed over California for your viewing pleasure.  Now it’s available on the Internet.  Just one more trivial fact that you might enjoy.

¡Feliz Cinco de Mayo!

Happy Cinco de Mayo!  If you are Mexican or of Mexican descent, I hope you have a chance to enjoy what is one of Mexico’s most prominent fiestas.  Cinco de Mayo honors Mexico’s victory over the French at the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862.  I should be down the National Mall in Washington, D.C. right now enjoying the annual Cinco de Mayo festivities sponsored the Maru Montero Dance Company, but alas, I am at home studying Spanish (and taking a break to write this short blog entry, of course).  Maybe I’ll make up for it by having Mexican food for dinner. 

Of course, other Latin American nations such as Paraguay don’t celebrate Cinco de Mayo, but this uniquely Latino festival is one of the few observed in the United States.  Paraguay’s Independence Day celebration will be on May 15 and on the evening of May 14 (Paraguay’s Flag Day) my wife and I will attend Paraguay’s Independence Day celebration at the Organization of American States (OAS) in Washington, D.C. 

Blog Notes:  My thoughts are with those who were affected by the tornado that destroyed Greensburg, Kansas today.  Greensburg is less than an hour from where my father lived.  My father passed away, but my mother-in-law still lives there.  Meteorologists have issued a tornado warning for a large swath of Kansas and Nebraska.  I hope that no more touch down in the aftermath of what happened in Greensburg.

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