Re: [Goanet] Banyan trees in Macau

2008-05-10 Thread Roland Francis
Arre baba Bernado, cusine means kitchen re, and that too in Konkani!

Did you by any chance mean cuisine?


Roland.

On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 10:50 PM, Bernado Colaco [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Typical bharat ignorance in the article. Goans although a small community 
 have contributed in a large way to the Macau society. Besides our food 
 elements have also penetrated  the local cusine. It is not only Banyan trees!


Re: [Goanet] Banyan trees in Macau

2008-05-10 Thread J. Colaco jc
Monsignor Roland,

I trust you will agree that to enter into cuisine', one has to go by
way of 'cusine'.

jc
No 'cujjin' of Bernado (:-)
PS: Have a good week end all and to all the mothers who read this
HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY

=

2008/5/10 Roland Francis [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Arre baba Bernado, cusine means kitchen re, and that too in Konkani!
Did you by any chance mean cuisine?
Roland.

On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 10:50 PM, Bernado Colaco [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Typical bharat ignorance in the article. Goans although a small community 
 have contributed in a large way to the Macau society. Besides our food 
 elements have also penetrated  the local cusine. It is not only Banyan trees!


[Goanet] Banyan trees in Macau

2008-05-09 Thread Bernado Colaco
Typical bharat ignorance in the article. Goans although a small community have 
contributed in a large way to the Macau society. Besides our food elements have 
also penetrated  the local cusine. It is not only Banyan trees!
BC
By Kavita Bajeli-Datt, Macau, May 7 : This swanky Chinese gambling
enclave, which was once a Portuguese colony, has a quaint Indian
connection - banyan trees, brought from Goa over a hundred years ago.


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