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Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by Riya:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Next quiz.

What's a 7-letter word for a Guyanese canoe?

 


A balahoo

A ballahoo is a bigger boat than a canoe.

 

I think Gilly is referring to a Koryall but I don't know the correct spelling.

MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY:

caΒ·noe

noun \kΙ™-ˈnΓΌ\

: a long narrow boat that is pointed at both ends and that is moved by a paddle with one blade

 

The vessel in that photo passes for a canoe, right?

That is a canoe.

 

Is Koryall correct? If it is, what is the correct spelling? 

The correct spelling is corial. [6 letters]

 

MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY:

coΒ·riΒ·al

noun
:  a Guianan native dugout canoe
 
Sorry, Mars. Riya won.

This is a ballahoo. It is not a canoe. A corial is a canoe.

 

Mars
Last edited by Mars
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by Riya:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Next quiz.

What's a 7-letter word for a Guyanese canoe?

 


A balahoo

A ballahoo is a bigger boat than a canoe.

 

I think Gilly is referring to a Koryall but I don't know the correct spelling.

MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY:

caΒ·noe

noun \kΙ™-ˈnΓΌ\

: a long narrow boat that is pointed at both ends and that is moved by a paddle with one blade

 

The vessel in that photo passes for a canoe, right?

That is a canoe.

 

Is Koryall correct? If it is, what is the correct spelling? 

The correct spelling is corial. [6 letters]

 

MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY:

coΒ·riΒ·al

noun
:  a Guianan native dugout canoe
 
Sorry, Mars. Riya won.

The question and answer are wrong then 

 

Ballahoo has 8 letters and is a schooner which is a lot bigger than a canoe

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballahoo-class_schooner

 

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Ballahoo

 

Ballahoo

BalΒ΄la`hoo

    (bΔƒlΒ΄lΓ₯`hŌ)
n.1.

fast-sailing schooner, used in the Bermudas and West Indies.

 

 

 

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ballahoo

 

:  a schooner of Bermuda and the West Indies having its foremast raking forward and mainmast aft

Here's a screenshot of the 1913 dictionary spelling. Also, check the newspaper spelling in an earlier post. Let's turn a blind eye to this one.

 

balahoo

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FM
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by Riya:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Next quiz.

What's a 7-letter word for a Guyanese canoe?

 


A balahoo

A ballahoo is a bigger boat than a canoe.

 

I think Gilly is referring to a Koryall but I don't know the correct spelling.

MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY:

caΒ·noe

noun \kΙ™-ˈnΓΌ\

: a long narrow boat that is pointed at both ends and that is moved by a paddle with one blade

 

The vessel in that photo passes for a canoe, right?

That is a canoe.

 

Is Koryall correct? If it is, what is the correct spelling? 

The correct spelling is corial. [6 letters]

 

MERRIAM-WEBSTER DICTIONARY:

coΒ·riΒ·al

noun
:  a Guianan native dugout canoe
 
Sorry, Mars. Riya won.

This is a ballahoo. It is not a canoe. A corial is a canoe.

 

Point taken, Mars. As I said earlier, you're correct technically, but my question has the term "Guyanese canoe." Balahoo is in current usage in Guyana as the two newspaper clips show in my previous post.

FM
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Next one.

What was the last year bicycle owners in Guyana were required to purchase bicycle licences?

Here is a pic of a 1948 British Guiana bicycle licence plate for a schoolboy. Separate licences were sold to adults.

This is an interesting one. Didn't even know that it was required at one point.

 

I'm guessing here.....1966

FM
Originally Posted by Riya:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Next one.

What was the last year bicycle owners in Guyana were required to purchase bicycle licences?

Here is a pic of a 1948 British Guiana bicycle licence plate for a schoolboy. Separate licences were sold to adults.

This is an interesting one. Didn't even know that it was required at one point.

 

I'm guessing here.....1966

Incorrect

 

FM
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Next quiz.

What's a 7-letter word for a Guyanese canoe?

 

Balahoo is the word I want. Riya wins.

 

Technically, Mars is correct to say that a balahoo is larger than a canoe.

The 1913 edition of Webster's Dictionary defines balahoo as "a fast sailing schooner used in the Bermudas and West Indies."

Note, however, the phrase "Guyanese canoe" in the question.

Look at this Kaieteur News report dated October 14, 2013:

"A  49-year-old man is missing and feared dead after the balahoo in which he was traveling collided with an unlit fishing vessel at around 21:50 hrs on Saturday in the Lower Pomeroon River."

And look at this Chronicle report dated May 20, 2013:

"THE Maritime Administration Department (MARAD) up to late yesterday was continuing its search and rescue efforts in the Essequibo River as they sought to locate dead or alive, 24-year old Fred Crème of Onderneeming, Essequibo Coast...Reports surrounding the tragedy suggested that the vessel in which the men were travelling in, a wooden balahoo encountered rough waters and efforts by the boat captain to ride the waves successfully were futile and the vessel toppled tossing the men overboard."

 

Congrats, Riya!

By the way, how do you know that these men were travelling in canoes? It could be that they were actually travelling in a boat which is big enough to be referred to as a ballahoo (eight letters please )

 

If there were nine men in the boat that capsized, it is more than likely not a canoe but a bigger boat in which case the newspapers would be correct in referring to the boat as a ballahoo (two L's ).

Mars
Originally Posted by Mars:

Dem newspapers ain't know nothing about nothing. I never heard anyone describe a canoe as a ballahoo in Guyana. It's always a corial to me. That's what river people call a canoe.

Mars, I think we can agree that words are used loosely in Guyana.

After 29 years of marriage, I have a problem understanding some words my wife uses. They're certainly not in the dictionary meaning sense.

For example, if I ask her a simple question, she would say "Don't torment me."

Torment? A simple question is torment? Hmmmm... sometimes I tell myself I should have married a Filipina.

FM
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Mars:

Dem newspapers ain't know nothing about nothing. I never heard anyone describe a canoe as a ballahoo in Guyana. It's always a corial to me. That's what river people call a canoe.

Mars, I think we can agree that words are used loosely in Guyana.

After 29 years of marriage, I have a problem understanding some words my wife uses. They're certainly not in the dictionary meaning sense.

For example, if I ask her a simple question, she would say "Don't torment me."

Torment? A simple question is torment? Hmmmm... sometimes I tell myself I should have married a Filipina.

you rass sound badaration 

FM
Originally Posted by warrior:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Mars:

Dem newspapers ain't know nothing about nothing. I never heard anyone describe a canoe as a ballahoo in Guyana. It's always a corial to me. That's what river people call a canoe.

Mars, I think we can agree that words are used loosely in Guyana.

After 29 years of marriage, I have a problem understanding some words my wife uses. They're certainly not in the dictionary meaning sense.

For example, if I ask her a simple question, she would say "Don't torment me."

Torment? A simple question is torment? Hmmmm... sometimes I tell myself I should have married a Filipina.

you rass sound badaration 

Banna, yuh know I-man talking the struth. Guyanese use certain words loosely.

Hear dis one: during the 1964 riots a patrol of British soldiers passed through our street. Shortly after, our neighbour called my mother: " Ah wheh yuh bin. Dem chinee sojah jus pass and gone."

For that woman, a white man was a chinese man.

FM

When a big brother is reprimanding a younger brother, the mother would say...

'Alyu kill am and done no'.

 

Me knew it was Balahoo and photographed an open ended one in Upper Mazaruni river, [must be from the bark of a tree] wid a mother taking three children to school in Kangaruma. Its a wide shot of the river with a small balahoo.

My Canadian audience usually ask ' Where are their life jackets ?'

 

Tola
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by warrior:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Mars:

Dem newspapers ain't know nothing about nothing. I never heard anyone describe a canoe as a ballahoo in Guyana. It's always a corial to me. That's what river people call a canoe.

Mars, I think we can agree that words are used loosely in Guyana.

After 29 years of marriage, I have a problem understanding some words my wife uses. They're certainly not in the dictionary meaning sense.

For example, if I ask her a simple question, she would say "Don't torment me."

Torment? A simple question is torment? Hmmmm... sometimes I tell myself I should have married a Filipina.

you rass sound badaration 

Banna, yuh know I-man talking the struth. Guyanese use certain words loosely.

Hear dis one: during the 1964 riots a patrol of British soldiers passed through our street. Shortly after, our neighbour called my mother: " Ah wheh yuh bin. Dem chinee sojah jus pass and gone."

For that woman, a white man was a chinese man.

It is interesting to rememba that the British soldiers were told, everyone with a red [jhandi] flag was a communist, like Cheddi Jagan.

Tola
Last edited by Tola
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Riya:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Next one.

What was the last year bicycle owners in Guyana were required to purchase bicycle licences?

Here is a pic of a 1948 British Guiana bicycle licence plate for a schoolboy. Separate licences were sold to adults.

This is an interesting one. Didn't even know that it was required at one point.

 

I'm guessing here.....1966

Incorrect

 

We moved from the logies to the new housing scheme in 1959, when I was.....younger than Gil.

Two or three years later my Dad was still buying bicycle and radio licence.

I still have copies somewhere.

 

So I would say it stopped in 1962 or 1963, maybe 1964.  

Tola
Last edited by Tola
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Chameli:

there's a song about somebody in a lil lil balahoo...

 

me nana made his own balahoo/ 'creyaal' from a big big tree...he chiselled and shiselled for weeks as i sat on the big tree trunk and watched...oh those memories

Cham..here is the song

 

http://youtu.be/ehQKf6ROHrI

their is a song that go look how them old lady a drink daroo she a pack a old man in a little balahoo

FM
Originally Posted by warrior:
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Chameli:

there's a song about somebody in a lil lil balahoo...

 

me nana made his own balahoo/ 'creyaal' from a big big tree...he chiselled and shiselled for weeks as i sat on the big tree trunk and watched...oh those memories

Cham..here is the song

 

http://youtu.be/ehQKf6ROHrI

their is a song that go look how them old lady a drink daroo she a pack a old man in a little balahoo

The link is the song by Niesha Benjamin original singer

here is link http://youtu.be/yw-BmesiPeE by Kanchan

Django
Last edited by Django
Originally Posted by Tola:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by Riya:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

Next one.

What was the last year bicycle owners in Guyana were required to purchase bicycle licences?

Here is a pic of a 1948 British Guiana bicycle licence plate for a schoolboy. Separate licences were sold to adults.

This is an interesting one. Didn't even know that it was required at one point.

 

I'm guessing here.....1966

Incorrect

 

We moved from the logies to the new housing scheme in 1959, when I was.....younger than Gil.

Two or three years later my Dad was still buying bicycle and radio licence.

I still have copies somewhere.

 

So I would say it stopped in 1962 or 1963, maybe 1964.  

Incorrect.

FM
Originally Posted by TI:

The porcelain one was in 1967, then plastic in 1968. It used to break so. Think it stopped in 1969.

QUESTION: What was the last year bicycle owners in Guyana were required to purchase bicycle licences?

DIRECT ANSWER: The last year Guyanese bicycle owners purchased bicycle licences was 1968.

From 1969, cyclists got free passes.

TI's answer is accepted. Congrats, young man.

FM
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

I hope you people aren't getting bored with this thread.

Lemme tickle allyuh tail now.

How many donkeys are there in Guyana?

[An estimate is acceptable. Closest estimate wins.]

 

Me answering fa Warria...ONE

Me also answering fa Skelly..YOU DE ONE.

 

Excuse me guys, me stomach hurts from laughing, you guys funny baaad. 

Tola
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:
Originally Posted by TI:

The porcelain one was in 1967, then plastic in 1968. It used to break so. Think it stopped in 1969.

QUESTION: What was the last year bicycle owners in Guyana were required to purchase bicycle licences?

DIRECT ANSWER: The last year Guyanese bicycle owners purchased bicycle licences was 1968.

From 1969, cyclists got free passes.

TI's answer is accepted. Congrats, young man.

YAAA!  

FM
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

I hope you people aren't getting bored with this thread.

Lemme tickle allyuh tail now.

How many donkeys are there in Guyana?

[An estimate is acceptable. Closest estimate wins.]

Iman doin the math..Guyana's population approx 700k about 40 % are jackasses, total..drumroll ...................approx 28 thousand.

cain
Originally Posted by cain:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

I hope you people aren't getting bored with this thread.

Lemme tickle allyuh tail now.

How many donkeys are there in Guyana?

[An estimate is acceptable. Closest estimate wins.]

Iman doin the math..Guyana's population approx 700k about 40 % are jackasses, total..drumroll ...................approx 28 thousand.

You smoked too much during Math class. 

Mars
Originally Posted by Tola:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

I hope you people aren't getting bored with this thread.

Lemme tickle allyuh tail now.

How many donkeys are there in Guyana?

[An estimate is acceptable. Closest estimate wins.]

 

Me answering fa Warria...ONE

Me also answering fa Skelly..YOU DE ONE.

 

Excuse me guys, me stomach hurts from laughing, you guys funny baaad. 

Tola, you are 100% correct. That's exactly how I was going to handle it. You see, I can tolerate the insults. What irks me is when these guys cannot handle the insults, they resort to family abuse.  

FM
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by cain:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

I hope you people aren't getting bored with this thread.

Lemme tickle allyuh tail now.

How many donkeys are there in Guyana?

[An estimate is acceptable. Closest estimate wins.]

Iman doin the math..Guyana's population approx 700k about 40 % are jackasses, total..drumroll ...................approx 28 thousand.

You smoked too much during Math class. 

Ohhh rass i shoulda stik in a xtra 0..hehehe  Nahh that's too much jackasses for one lil country like Guyana.

I'll stay with the 28k

 

Are donkeys used in US as in T.O on farms?

cain
Originally Posted by cain:
Originally Posted by Mars:
Originally Posted by cain:
Originally Posted by Gilbakka:

I hope you people aren't getting bored with this thread.

Lemme tickle allyuh tail now.

How many donkeys are there in Guyana?

[An estimate is acceptable. Closest estimate wins.]

Iman doin the math..Guyana's population approx 700k about 40 % are jackasses, total..drumroll ...................approx 28 thousand.

You smoked too much during Math class. 

Ohhh rass i shoulda stik in a xtra 0..hehehe  Nahh that's too much jackasses for one lil country like Guyana.

I'll stay with the 28k

 

Are donkeys used in US as in T.O on farms?

I haven't really seen too many donkeys in the U.S. but they probably use them on farms and ranches. 

Mars

We have one winner, guys!

According to data compiled by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization [FAO], there were approximately 1,000 donkeys in Guyana in 1997.

The report said "Donkey populations in the Caribbean have been quite
stable." We can interpret this to mean that from 1997 to today the number remains at around 1,000.

Congratulations, Django!

 

 

donkey in guyana

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Images (1)
  • donkey in guyana
FM

I just checked it and copied the last paragraph:  

 

Discussion and conclusions
It has been made clear that the estimates of
donkey populations presented here should be
treated with great caution. The reliability of the
information is low, but broad trends can be noted.
The world population of donkeys has been
increasing. This is due mainly to the growth of
donkey populations in Freedumb House.
This has more than set the decline in the Mediterranean region.
cain

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