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Originally posted by quedup
reply to post by PageAlaCearl
Perhaps Danish.
"Mars" in Dutch is a march (you know, like soldiers marching), "Maart" is the month March.
Originally posted by PageAlaCearl
Originally posted by cayote
reply to post by PageAlaCearl
Actually March in Dutch is Maart according to Google translate.
Yes both words mean March, try it for yourself, translate Mars from Dutch to English, you get March, do it the other way around you get Maart.
Originally posted by PageAlaCearl
Originally posted by cayote
reply to post by PageAlaCearl
Actually March in Dutch is Maart according to Google translate.
Yes both words mean March, try it for yourself, translate Mars from Dutch to English, you get March, do it the other way around you get Maart.
Originally posted by LightSpeedDriverNo pre-shocks or rumbles, just a huge "bang" that dies down...
The name of March comes from ancient Rome, when March was the first month of the year and named Martius after Mars or Ares, the Greek god of war. In Rome, where the climate is Mediterranean, March was the first month of spring, a logical point for the beginning of the year as well as the start of the military campaign season. January became the first month of the calendar year either under King Numa Pompilius (c. 713 BC) or under the Decemvirs about 450 BC (Roman writers differ). The numbered year began on March 1 in Russia until the end of the 15th century. Great Britain and its colonies continued to use March 25 until 1752, which was when they ultimately adopted the Gregorian calendar. Many other cultures and religions still celebrate the beginning of the New Year in March.
March
Spanish: andar
Italian: camminare
German: März, Marsch, März/marschieren
Japanese: yayoi
Latin: ambulare
French: marcher
Norwegian: mars
Swedish: tåga
Portugese: Março
Swahili: Machi
Originally posted by amongus
Really? We are arguing about the translation of March?
Really?
Face palm.
Originally posted by LightSpeedDriver
Would appreciate someone familiar with the subject at hand commenting. Please examine the following picture. It compares a (nuclear) detonation to a genuine earthquake. Someone on page one linked or posted a seismograph reading for this quake which looks suspiciously like...well, I'll let you be the judge.
Random internet source:
Linked pic from OP:
edit on 14/3/12 by LightSpeedDriver because: Added picedit on 14/3/12 by LightSpeedDriver because: Typo
Originally posted by cayote
Originally posted by LightSpeedDriver
Would appreciate someone familiar with the subject at hand commenting. Please examine the following picture. It compares a (nuclear) detonation to a genuine earthquake. Someone on page one linked or posted a seismograph reading for this quake which looks suspiciously like...well, I'll let you be the judge.
Random internet source:
Linked pic from OP:
edit on 14/3/12 by LightSpeedDriver because: Added picedit on 14/3/12 by LightSpeedDriver because: Typo
This looks very interesting and scary.
Does anyone have an idea on why the shape of this so called Earthquake looks of?
Originally posted by PageAlaCearl
March
Spanish: andar
Italian: camminare
German: März, Marsch, März/marschieren
Japanese: yayoi
Latin: ambulare
French: marcher
Norwegian: mars
Swedish: tåga
Portugese: Março
Swahili: Machi
common-words-translated.findthedata.org...