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A riddle - un acertijo

 

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  #11  
Old June 23, 2009, 09:39 AM
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Originally Posted by brute View Post
Good. You have the right letters, but where does he live?
He lives in the Netherlands, as Malila already pointed out. Were you after more than this?
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  #12  
Old June 23, 2009, 10:36 AM
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Originally Posted by Rusty View Post
He lives in the Netherlands, as Malila already pointed out. Were you after more than this?
Bingo!

HIJ = he = él

K = koninklijk = royal = real

L = lucht = air = aéreo

M = maatskappij = company = compañia
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  #13  
Old June 23, 2009, 10:49 AM
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  #14  
Old June 25, 2009, 12:17 PM
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The English word FACETIOUS(LY) has all the vowels A E I O U (and Y) in the correct alphabebetical order.
I know two similar English words that do the same.

How many can you find in English or Spanish?

La palabra inglesa FACETIOUS(LY) tiene todas las vocales A E I O U (y Y) en el orden correcto alfabebetico.

Sé dos similares palabras ingleses ¿Cuántas se puede encontrar en inglés o español?
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  #15  
Old June 25, 2009, 12:22 PM
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El nombre propio "Aurelio" tiene las cinco vocales, aunque no en orden.
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  #16  
Old June 25, 2009, 12:25 PM
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Originally Posted by AngelicaDeAlquezar View Post
El nombre propio "Aurelio" tiene las cinco vocales, aunque no en orden.
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Ultrarevolutionaries is a word in which each of the five main vowels occurs twice.
Doble
Quote:
Subbookkeeper is the only English word with four pairs of double letters in a row.
¿Quién halla esas palabras?
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Old June 25, 2009, 12:35 PM
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En español hay varias... pero ninguna se me ocurre con las vocales en orden... murciélago, aeronáutica, eucalipto, abuelito, ecuación... ¿se valen las palabras donde la "u" no suena? (Arquetipo, estanquillo, cosquillear...)

@Bob: es necesario tener tiempo libre.
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  #18  
Old June 25, 2009, 03:39 PM
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Originally Posted by bobjenkins View Post
Doble


¿Quién halla esas palabras?
Personas como nosotros con un diccionario muy grande!

Me gustan mucho ultrarevolutioaries y subbookkeepers

En alemán se dice palabras como Flussschifffahrt

Fluss .....río.... river

Schiff....... barco... boat

Fahrt....... excurcón...... trip
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  #19  
Old June 26, 2009, 12:45 AM
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En español, las palabras que contienen todas las vocales se llaman "pentavocálicas" o "panvocálicas". Las palabras en cuyo interior las vocales se hallan ordenadas, se denominan "alfabético-vocálicas", frente a las "alfabético-vocálicas inversas", cuyo orden es inverso.

No conozco ninguna palabra española panvocálica que sea a la vez alfabético-vocálica (hay de cuatro vocales, como "transgredidos"), pero sí alfabético-vocálica inversa: suboccidental o sudorífera, por ejemplo.
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  #20  
Old June 26, 2009, 02:00 PM
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Originally Posted by irmamar View Post
En español, las palabras que contienen todas las vocales se llaman "pentavocálicas" o "panvocálicas". Las palabras en cuyo interior las vocales se hallan ordenadas, se denominan "alfabético-vocálicas", frente a las "alfabético-vocálicas inversas", cuyo orden es inverso.

No conozco ninguna palabra española panvocálica que sea a la vez alfabético-vocálica (hay de cuatro vocales, como "), pero sí alfabético-vocálica inversa: suboccidental o sudorífera, por ejemplo.
¡Muchas palabras muy hermosas!

suboccidental, sudorífera,transgredidos, pentavocálicas, panvocálicas, salfabético-vocálicas inversas.

Hay otras palabras ingleses y alfabético-penta(o hexa)vocálicas. Por ejemplo abste........ ) dos ejemplos.
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