I believe it's an airport, quite close to Paris.
Francis
On 9 Mar 2009, at 22:36, richard.hea...@tiscali.co.uk wrote:
Hi All,
Do we mean oral/orally or aural/aurally ... or perhaps both?
Richard
Fancy a job? - http://www.tiscali.co.uk/jobs/
__
Date: Tue, 10 Mar 2009 10:03:06 -
On 9 Mar 2009, richard.hea...@tiscali.co.uk wrote:
Do we mean oral/orally or aural/aurally ... or perhaps both?
If it's a song, orally / aurally could be equally valid.
A tune is learnt aurally.
Since we appear to be having a light hearted moment I
Mouth music?
-Original Message-
From: nsp-request+j.gibbons=ic.ac...@cs.dartmouth.edu
[mailto:nsp-request+j.gibbons=ic.ac...@cs.dartmouth.edu] On Behalf Of
julia@nspipes.co.uk
Sent: 10 March 2009 10:04
To: nsp@cs.dartmouth.edu
Subject: [NSP] Re: Confused!
Date: Tue, 10 Mar 2009 10
How's about the following simple working definitions:
Oral tradition has to do with information transfer using spoken words. Aural
tradition has to do with learning to play music by hearing it being played by
someone else. In either case, nothing is learned or transfered through written
Or really?
Malcolm
-Original Message-
From: richard.hea...@tiscali.co.uk richard.hea...@tiscali.co.uk
To: nsp@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Mon, 9 Mar 2009 10:36 pm
Subject: [NSP] Confused!
Hi All,
Do we mean oral/orally or aural/aurally ... or perhaps both?
Richard
Fancy a job? -
] Re: Confused!
Or really?
Malcolm
-Original Message-
From: richard.hea...@tiscali.co.uk richard.hea...@tiscali.co.uk
To: nsp@cs.dartmouth.edu
Sent: Mon, 9 Mar 2009 10:36 pm
Subject: [NSP] Confused!
Hi All,
Do we mean oral/orally or aural/aurally ... or perhaps both?
Richard
Fancy