Saturday, June 27, 2009

Deborah Sampson Revolutionary Quotes

Un livre à croquer

If there is one book to have in their library it is this one. For my part, I long to get it for editing had long been sold out in bookstores. Yet I knew by hearsay that "Talking crunch" by Claude Duneton was a work which must put into words many still abstract notions at the time for me. One day, I managed to find internet treasure, and what was not my enlightenment by opening the pages of this book appeared in 1973 with a major publisher in Paris.
A reissue that comes at
With editions "of Lo Chamin feels Jaume," which comes from the reissue, you'll enjoy your turn to prose alert, ironic, and relevant Claude Duneton in a "Talk Crunch" timeless. Throughout the pages, the author explains in part from personal experience why 14 million Occitan in 1930 are more than 1.5 million 70 years later. As harassment, renunciation, and humiliation it took to get there. But the interest of the work does not stop there, it also lies in a very detailed study of the French language, its origin to the present, highlighting its strengths and weaknesses. It then finds the answers to the current problem of teaching the language of Voltaire. Claude Duneton fact a comparison unexpected and very jubilant between Occitan, French and English. Many misconceptions are thus undermined. People who would have remained in the thoughts of the nineteenth century will find the opportunity to do a makeover show and intellectual in a different light the question of sustainability and the transmission of regional languages.
"Talking crunch" has not waned and his new edition is timely to come and lead the debate on the merits of the Occitan language teaching in our schools. Talking Duneton
crisp, Claude Chamin Editions de Sent Jaume (213 pages) 17.00 Euro

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