| #91 - Posted 19 November 2011, 4:15 PM | |
Location: France, London / Paris Join date: January 2010 Member #: 4471 Posts: 735 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican @ lautaro Don't Know about native indians but for african ancestry the study exists i'll post it asap @ lemba Agree keep your spanish with his dominican flavour Tatico Henriquez es el mejor !!!! |
Post IP/Country: 78.251.255.20* / FR | |
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| #92 - Posted 20 November 2011, 6:11 PM | |
Location: United States Join date: November 2011 Member #: 9620 Posts: 2 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican Quote: Agilucho previously said: Like I've said before, I have many friends from SFM, and they look like any other cibaeno. The average SFM is a mulatto, which is what seperates it from Eastern and Southern Provinces where people on average are Griffes. the average person in most of the cibao is a triracial and the average person in the capital is a mulatto. in the rest of the country is either balanced or pred. ssa afro-european except for places like bani, san jose de ocoa and parts of azua and barahona where leans more to the european... |
Post IP/Country: 216.254.68.7* / US | |
| #93 - Posted 20 November 2011, 6:14 PM | |
Location: United States Join date: November 2011 Member #: 9620 Posts: 2 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican Quote: Agilucho previously said: To be fair, there are sections of the Cibao Central (or traditional) which are very very african influenced. Say For example, La Vega: i see...but remember that lower class dominicans tend to be darker on average...ahora mismo te puedo traer un video de cualquier barrio pobre de pais y no sera mucha la diferencia... @lemba do you consider the municipalities of constanza and jarabacoa a corner of la vega? LOL i don't... ![]() |
Post IP/Country: 216.254.68.7* / US | |
| #94 - Posted 20 November 2011, 9:49 PM | |
Location: United States, OMNIPRESENT. El Cantinero de Jarabacoa. "Aguilucho desde Chiquitito" Join date: March 2009 Member #: 2380 Posts: 5010 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican Quote: Pete809 previously said: Quote: Agilucho previously said: To be fair, there are sections of the Cibao Central (or traditional) which are very very african influenced. Say For example, La Vega: i see...but remember that lower class dominicans tend to be darker on average...ahora mismo te puedo traer un video de cualquier barrio pobre de pais y no sera mucha la diferencia... @lemba do you consider the municipalities of constanza and jarabacoa a corner of la vega? LOL i don't... ![]() During the Haitian conquest Veganos settled in Jarabacoa. We are a part of each other. Jarabacoa is in the province of La Vega. Conocer al cojo sentao! Las Aguilas son Las Aguilas!!!!!!!! |
Post IP/Country: 170.232.192.1* / US | |
| #95 - Posted 21 November 2011, 12:15 AM | |
Location: United States, El cuarto bate Join date: March 2009 Member #: 2300 Posts: 10627 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican Quote: Pete809 previously said: Quote: Agilucho previously said: Like I've said before, I have many friends from SFM, and they look like any other cibaeno. The average SFM is a mulatto, which is what seperates it from Eastern and Southern Provinces where people on average are Griffes. the average person in most of the cibao is a triracial and the average person in the capital is a mulatto. in the rest of the country is either balanced or pred. ssa afro-european except for places like bani, san jose de ocoa and parts of azua and barahona where leans more to the european... Southern and border towns are not more european like you say and by european you mean mostly from Spain Edited on 11/21/2011 12:16 AM by xwill7. |
Post IP: 108.74.153.13* | |
| #96 - Posted 21 November 2011, 12:34 AM | |
Location: United States, OMNIPRESENT. El Cantinero de Jarabacoa. "Aguilucho desde Chiquitito" Join date: March 2009 Member #: 2380 Posts: 5010 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican Quote: xwill7 previously said: Quote: Pete809 previously said: Quote: Agilucho previously said: Like I've said before, I have many friends from SFM, and they look like any other cibaeno. The average SFM is a mulatto, which is what seperates it from Eastern and Southern Provinces where people on average are Griffes. the average person in most of the cibao is a triracial and the average person in the capital is a mulatto. in the rest of the country is either balanced or pred. ssa afro-european except for places like bani, san jose de ocoa and parts of azua and barahona where leans more to the european... Southern and border towns are not more european like you say and by european you mean mostly from Spain I did not notice any border towns that he mentioned Will. Conocer al cojo sentao! Las Aguilas son Las Aguilas!!!!!!!! |
Post IP/Country: 170.232.192.1* / US | |
| #97 - Posted 6 January 2012, 5:38 AM | |
Location: France, London / Paris Join date: January 2010 Member #: 4471 Posts: 735 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican An Interesting PHD thesis about Medieval spain and his slave population : North Africans , Eastern Europeans and Subsaharan Africans : http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/NQ53756.pdf Spaniards was already a mixed nation before they reach the new world : Iberians, Visigoths, Moors, Eastern Europeans, Tartars etc One could consult also Jacques Heers, Charles Verlinden, Evariste Levi Provençal works etc Tatico Henriquez es el mejor !!!! |
Post IP/Country: 159.50.249.15* / FR | |
| #98 - Posted 11 April 2012, 4:57 PM | |
Location: United States Join date: April 2010 Member #: 4966 Posts: 926 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican Post was deleted (low rank) |
Post IP/Country: 65.79.111.5* / US | |
| #99 - Posted 11 April 2012, 9:25 PM | |
Location: United States Join date: July 2009 Member #: 3276 Posts: 534 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican I think learning Dominican is a uneducated way of putting it since Dominicans speak Spanish. No one in latin america speaks the proper Spanish from Spain. Colombians swear they do but when you hear a Colombian speak and a Spanish person speaking its totally different. Oh btw Cuban speak the same way as Dominicans. |
Post IP/Country: 69.113.189.14* / US | |
| #100 - Posted 11 April 2012, 9:58 PM | |
Location: United States, El cuarto bate Join date: March 2009 Member #: 2300 Posts: 10627 | RE: The difference between learning Spanish and Dominican Quote: divinedominicana previously said: I think learning Dominican is a uneducated way of putting it since Dominicans speak Spanish. No one in latin america speaks the proper Spanish from Spain. Colombians swear they do but when you hear a Colombian speak and a Spanish person speaking its totally different. Oh btw Cuban speak the same way as Dominicans. Which Dominican style do you speak? |
Post IP: 108.74.154.1* | |
