At 02:27 PM 10/29/2004, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I only got a "D" in high school espanol, but it seems to me for "man-on-man",
the Hispanic term traditionally is "Mano A Mano"...

"Mano Y Mano" I think means "man AND man", which may be what you meant if you
were flying in Massachusetts...

It actually means "Hand and Hand" the way it's written here; the typical usage is "mano a mano", or "hand to hand", as in hand-to-hand combat.


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